Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1923 — Page 2
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PROGRESSIVES MAY BACK FORD FOR PRESIDENT
ZONING ORDINANCE AWAIIS MOVE OF PLAN COMMISSION Residents in North Section Protest Erection of Ice Plant. The recommendation of the city plan commission on zoning of territory between Forty-J'Jlnth St., Fifty-Second St., Arsenal Ave., and the present city limits will be awaited by the city council before any action is taken, it was indicated today following a public hearing in an adjourned council meeting Monday night. The fight on zoning of the terriory centers on an attempt of the Polar Ice and Fuel Company to build a plant on the Monon Railroad in that territory. Property owners protested through E. O. Snethen, president of the Federation of Community Civic Clubs that their homes would be damaged. Snethen Protests. "This district is bounded by residential sections, and is one of the moet beautiful in the city," said Snethen. "Property owners who went out there years ago should be protected. Their life-time savings are represented by these investments." Harry C. Yockey, attorney for the Polar Ice and Fuel Company, and Henry L. Dithmer, president, said that, most of the territory along the Monon was industrial and that the plant must be located in that territory so customers could be served." "Where can you put industries if they are not on railroads?" asked Yockey. “This question should be decided for the good of the whole city, not this one district." Dithmer said the company bought the ground before it become a part of the city and already had started construction. He offered amendments proposing that the district be zoned as industrial, and another that their own property be zoned as industrial. John King president, referred them to committees. Contract Ordinance Killed The council killed an ordinance ratifying a contract made by the board of works ♦or purchase of throe Federal trucks for $14,1*55 on motion of Councilman Bernd thar "the city coujd get them cheaper. ' Councilman Clauer alone voted fcr passage. A proposal to place ornamental paper waste baskets in the street by contract with the American City Serv ice Corporation of Dayton, Ohio, which uses the baskets for advertising purposes, was killed by the council 4 to 3. Councilmen Buchanan, Clauer, Thompson and President King voted against it. An ordinance appropriating S6OO for an automatic "stop" and "go” signal was passed. Transfer ordinances were passed to allow city departments to function the remainder of the year without loans
RATE INCREASES HALM lIS. Indiana Chamber Executive Predicts Change, t i • A combined cane in which inequalities in freight rates on steel and iron products will he ironed out, was | predicted by George H. Mosser, secretary' of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce, today Mosser bases his prediction cn suspension of increases In freight rates on seventy-seven steel products, announced today by the Interstate commerce commission. _The increases were asked by the Central Freight Association for points from western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio to points up to 175 miles from the steel belt. The increased rates were to have been effective, Oct. 7. . REVOLTING GREEKS SURRENDER ARMS King Informed Government Is in Control of Situation. By VKited Press ATHENS, Oct. 23.—Two battalllons of troops revolting against the Greek provisional government were surrounded In Macedonia and forced to surrender today. Other revolutionaries concentrated at Scutari, fifty miles from Athens, also 'rere dispersed. The main force of the insurrectionists are to be in Corinth, under General Leonard spoils. A train in .astern Macedonia transferring troops to Salonika was bombed by revolters’ airplane and thirty soldiers were injured. General Gouataa today v.sited the King, informing him the government has the situation completely In hand. DISHWASHER STEALS SSOO Restaurant Worker Pleads Guilty and Gets Ftve Years in Prison. By United Press \ MUNCIE, 'lnd., Oct* 28.—William Borrell. dishwasher Ip a restaurant here, pleaded Vullty today to robbing the restaurant ib till of SSOO, and was sentenced to five years in prison. Practically all the money waa re-covoA-ed. \ V
My Wife! The Inspiration That Lifts Two Great Artists to Fame
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ERNEST LINNENKAMP AND HIS WIFE.
AMNESIA VICTIM AWAKES TO FIND HE ISBIGAIST Federal Dry Agent, Gassed in War, Recognizes First Wife, Forgets Second Venture, By United Press ST. CLOUD, Minn., Oct. 23.—Arthur E. Wh tney. Federal prohibition commissioner of M nneapolls, awoke today from unconsciousness to find the wife he lost when he went to war. Losing all memory of his past life when he was gassed in France during the World War, Whitney returned to New York and married Ann Murphy, 24. He was ignorant then of the fact he was already married and the father of two sons. Whitney, coming to Minneapolis as prohibition commissioner, went on a chase for beer runners last week. They attacked him and beat him until lie was unconscious. Today he awoke. Beside him was Mrs. Luella Whitney of Grafton, N. D. He recognized her immediately as his first wife. He has no recollection of Ann Murphy. Physicians, fearful another shock may prove fatal, are withholding the true facts from Whitney. He is expected to live. POLICE CHANGES 0. K.D Resignation of Patrolman Ward Is Accepted by Board. Minor police changes were confirmed by the board of safety today on recommendation of Police Chief Rikhoff. The resignation of Patrolman Chester Ward was accepted. Charlee M. Carter was reinstated as patrolman, and Oscar Orr and Robert Smith were appointed patrolmen. Sergt. Charles Halstead was granted a fifteen-day extension of time on his vacation, from Dec. 12-26. Ralph Fender and John E. Kramer were named substitute firemen, and William Murphy was appointed regular fireman. AUTOMATIC‘COP’ ORDERED The S6OO appropriated by city council Monday night for purchase of an automatic “stop” and “go" traffic signal will be applied immediately for an elaborate signal at Thirty-Eighth and Meridian Sts., the board of safety ordered today. Mayor Shank indorsed the plan %nd said he would sign the ordinance. The board of safety will have John Earry, city electrician, examine the signal and model a similar one which will be‘built by the local department If patent rights are not infringed. Community Club to Meet The community cheat campaign and accident prevention work will bo discussed in a,, community meeting tonight at 7:30 in Fire •tatlon 26, Raymond and Webb Sts.
Who Inspires You to Buck the World? Is It the Face You See Over the Coffee Pot Each Morning? I VERY poem, every painting, every great work of literature, say philosophers, has been inspired by some woman. Romancing about a woman, Dante wrote his great “Inferno.” Encouraged by a woman, Columbus set out to discover anew world. For women, wars have been fought, civilizations changed. Two artists, both of wide renown, openly avow they owe their greatest inspiration to their wives. Who inspires you to go out and buck the world, to put over that deal, down that adversary 1 Is it, by any chance, your wifet By JOSEPHINE VAN DE GRIFT NEA Servlet StafT Writer N r ~~~~ EW YORK, Oct. 23.—Consider now the face which looks at you over the coffee pot of a morning. Does it inspire you to go out and conquer the world'/ It should, for— Two famous artists have arrived in America, the one a painter, the other a sculptor. Both have exhibited their works in the famous salons of Europe. Both are eminently successful. Both are students of feminine beauty. And both attribute their greatest inspiration to their wives. "My wife—she is the mo3t beautiful woman in the world,” avows Alexr.rder Archipenko, Russian, and one of the famous sculptors of the world, who has come to found a school in America. "I consider my wife the perfect type of northern beauty," declares Ernest Linnenkamp, Viennese portrait painter, who has come to these shores to seek out and paint the fifteen most beautiful women In America. Not Their Beauty But is It for their beauty that these two women have proved an Inspiration to genius? Pooh! Bah!! "It is her great calmness,” declares Archipenko, thrusting two hands into the pockets of his rough tweed i uit and eaUng up the drawing room carpet with quick, nervous * trides. "It is because of her naturalness,” says Herr Linnenkamp, balancing his Immaculately groomed 3elf upon patent leather toes in the drawing room of the Hotel Astor, where both artists are staying. This is how they found out: Two years ago the sculptor Archipenko was holding an exhibit in Dresden. To the exhibit came a German lady, also an artist In an tunsteur way. The sculptor looked and forgot all else. And ft seemed the lady's name was Angelica. "Marvelous," exclaimed Auchlpei. ko. And so, four weeks later, they were married. In Vienna some notable or other was giving a reoeptlon at which the important personages were to be a famous Dutch beauty and the portrait painter, Linnenkamp. They met. The painter entreated to be allowed to make a portrait of the tail girl from The Netherlands. She consented. And so they were married. Both Inspirations The painting which Linnenkamp made of his wife Is one of his greatest and best known. He has used her in countless studies. | The bust which Archipenko made of his wife Is one of his greatest and best known, and is in the museum at Leipzig. "My wife—she Is the soul of friendship, beauty and comradeship,” says Linnenkamp, "she inspires me to the highest."
"My wife," says Archipenko. "She is ail that is great and beautiful.” And eo—regard now that face behind your own coffee pot. Who knows? Perhaps—
EDUCATOR ADMITS FAKE CERTIFICATES School Superintendent Confesses Supplying Ring With Fraudulent Medical Diplomas—State Examinations Cancelled,
By United Press ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 23.—8. H. Jolley, $l,lOO a year superintendent < schools of St. Charles County, has confessed supplying the Bt. LouisKansas City fake medical diploma ring with high school certificates at $5 each, the St. Louis Star declared in a copyrighted article today. Dr. Robert Adcox, Bt. Louis, under arrest as ths clearing agent for the ring, received the diplomas and used them to furnish "requirements" •to
LLOYD GEORGE AT HARDING TOMB (Continued From Page 1)
threats” against the former British premier. Lloyd George carried away with him from Indianapolis the memory of one of his most thrilling meetings, for. he was cheered longer and more vociferously there by an audience of more than 10,000 than at any other speech of his tour when he said in ringing tones: "As one who went through all the horrors of the last war. I will raise my voice as long as I am able to say, ‘There must be no more war.’” He said If Britain and the United States did not complete the work of justice and fair play which they began by entering the World War, Europe would have a "merry-go-round of the devil," with warß breeding more wars interminably. The train from Ind anapolis arrived at Marion before dawn. A party of Mar on citizens, all old friends and school mates of the lato Warren G. Harding, met the former premier and escorted him through the little city by automob.leThe party stopped at Marion cemetery and then went on to White Oak Farm, where Mrs. Florence Harding is l.ving with the family of Dr. C. E Sawyer, personal physic.an of her late husband. It was the former premier’s first
Dame Margaret Greets Welshmen in Native Tongue
f" . | SMALL, motherly woma.fi, I I simply clothed," greeting U&V *1 tives of her own Wales in hrtr native tongue. That was the memory Welsh peoplo of Indianapolis cherished today of! Dame Margaret Lloyd George, wife of] the former British premier. Following a tea party given in her honor by the Indianapolis chapter of the American Welsh Boot sty, in the Chateau (Monday
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
give his proteges admittance to medical schools and examinations, Jollery said. At least fifty-seven of the certificates were supplied to Adox by Jolley within twelve months, Jolley said. Ho is 36 years old and has been county superintendent of schools for nine years. I>r. E. P. North head of the State board of health, today canceled State examinations for authority to practice medic,ne in the State, which were to have been held Dec. 4,6, 6 and 7.
visit to Ohio, “birthplace of Presidents," and he took considerable pride in his ability to name over the several Presidents whose lives were intimately connected w.th the h.story of the Buckeye State. DELAWARE BRIDGE HOPE OF OFFICIALS Mass Meeting on Project In North Side Tonight. City officials were confident today that plans for a Delaware St. bridge over Fall Creek would be perfected at a mass meeting tonight in the community hall, Thirty-Fourth and New Jersey Sts. The Hoosler Motor Club is behind the project. County and city officials will be present and the public has been invited. Mayor Shank, C. O. Dodson, of the county council and other officials will speak. The police and firemen’s band will play. Straightening and widening of E. New York St., will be considered as well as the major thoroughfare system advocated by the city plan commission. NAVY DAY OBSERVANCE Governor McCray and Mayor Shank will issue proclamations declaring Saturday os Navy day, Lieut. O. O. Kes sing, in charge of local recruiting, said today. Secretary of War Weeks has granted members ts the officers’ reserve corps right to wear military uniforms in the parade which is to be a part of the Navy day program.
afternoon, Dame Margaret stopped long enough to shake hands and chat with many of her former countrymen. In & shor:, friendly talk, she expressed regret that her husband was forced to mart, to preserve his voice, and so could not attend the affair. , She pleaded for peace, with England and the United States united against war, “After all, we are first cousins," she said. “I hope always shall go side iby side. A great power would not
ALEXANDER ARCHIPENKO AND HIS WIFE.
CONTRIBUTORS RAISE GIFTS TO COMMUNITY FUND Special Committee Reports Total Contributions of $70,930. Gifts totalling $70,930 from firms which last year gave $50,427 were announced today by the special gifts committee of the Community Fund. The committee met at the Lincoln where its future work was outlined. G. Barret Moxley Is chairman. F.rmi which have ccntr buted, with their gifts this year and those of las: year follow: Circle Theater, $1,200, $1,200; Rappaport tk Kipp, attorneys, S9OO, $804.48; Eli Lily Company, SIB,OOO, SIO,OOO, MooneyrMueller Ward Com pany $3,600, $3,000; Kiefer-Stewart Company, $8,600, $3,000; Joseph T. Stokes, druggist. S6OO, SIBO. L. S. Ayres & Cos., SIO,OOO, $10,000: Real Silk Hosiery Mills, sfl.o(>o, sl,oßo’ Corrugated Box Company, SBOO, $250; Paper Package Company, $360, $300; Fairmount Glass Company, $1,600, $1,000; Mr. and Mrs. £iugh McK. Landon, $4,500, $8,600; L. C. Huesmann, $1,200, SI,OOO. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Campbell, S6OO, $800; 11. M. Glossbrenner, $720, $600; Mr. and Mrs. John N. Carey, $1,200, $1,200; Western Oil Refining Company, $3,600, $3,000; Klngan & Cos., SIO,OOO, $2,500; Peoples Outfitting Company, $2,750, $2,413.44. Handbag and Contents Gone Goldie Griffin, 605 Majestic Bldg.. Pennsylvania and Maryland Sts., told police her handbag, containing $7 In cash, a railroad pass, ring, gloves and keys, valued at $26, were stolen from a desk. Handbag Taken From Auto A handbag containing clothing, valued at S2O was taken from a car owned by W. L. Bertman, 2130 Ashland Ave., parked at Capitol Ave. and Washington St. Sanitary Board Buys Auto The sanitary board purchased a Chevrolet car for use of the department today. Purchase price wos $703.12.
dare start war if America and England were together against war.” More than 350 attended the tea party. James Thomas, president of the local Welsh Society, presided. Meredith Nicholson, author, In a brief talk spoke of Lloyd George as “The man who saved civilization.” Mr. and Mrs. William P. Thomas, parents of James Thomas, came 800 miles, from Wellaton, Ohio, to attend the party. Elwood sent a delegation of sixty-five and Cincinnati of twenty.
Call Issued for National Conference of | Party at Omaha Nov, 20 —Hearst, Johnson and Sj>hipstead Among Speakers, / Bv Times Special L. OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 23.—A call for a national conference of the national progressive party was issued by (Roy M. Harrop, temporary chairman, today. The conference will be held here Nov. 20-22. Delegates are expected from thirty States. A committee v/'Il probably be appointed a't the conference to try to induce Henry Ford to accept the progressive nomination for President, Harrop said.
WHAT M’CRAY DID WITH CHECKS IS EKiGMATO BOARD I, Newt Brown Says ‘There Is Plenty of Time to Speak Later,' Admission that the State board of agriculture gave Governor McCray $155,000 in checks and that the board had no positive knowledge of what iho Governor did with the money was made today by I. Newt Brown, secretary-treasurer of the body. "I'm not balking about this matter now. There wili be plenty of time to epeak of this later,” said Brown. Brown eaid McCray gave collateral on the amount but would not name the nature of the security. McCray, In his statement before United States Commissioner Logan at Ft. Wayne, had declared the money was loaned to him by the board and that he gave collateral which turned out to be a little "slow.” Brown made an immediate public denial that a “loan" had been executed. Bond Issue Rec alled Early this, year the board of agriculture, under authority of a 1923 legislative act. soid a $1,000,000 bond issue for use in a building program at the State Fairground. The Northern r , sf Company of Chicago and the Fletcher American National Bank of mu,., aaiwlis, on a joint bid, paid the board $976,000 for the issue. The building program had hardly begun when McCray reminded the board -of a $460,000 obligation to the State’s general fund in the way of a loan *of some years' standing. The board immediately called attention to a Supreme Court decision in which it was held the $460,000 was an “appropriation" and not a loan. The general fund then, as now. was depleted and McCray was insistent that the obligation be paid. Deposit Records Records of the board of agriculture show the following deposits with the Discount end Deposit State Bank at Kentland: June 2, $25,000: June 8, $25,000; June 11, $50,000; June 27. July 13. $30,000; totaling $156.000. The first two deposits, it has been explained, were authorized by the executive committee of the board and the last three by Horry M. Moberly of Shelbyville. president of the board, and by Brown. The entire $156,000 was returned to the board Aug. 28, through a certificate of deposit in the National City Bank of Indianapolis of which James P. Goodrich, one of the contributors to the $350,000 McCray l-001, is president.
WOMEN’S CLUBS OPENASSEMBLY Evansville Is Host to Annual State Convention, By United Press EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 23.—Indiana club politics was the leading topic of d.scussion in hotel lobb.es here today as 300 delegates assembled for the four-day annual con vent.on of the Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs. Mrs. O. N. Plttinger, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan, Gary, are oppos.ng candidates for president. The election is scheduled for Thursday. Mrs. Sheehan has backing of women’s clubs and organizations in northern Indiana, wh.le Mrs. Pittin ger is second vice president of the federation. Mayor Elmendorf ,will welcome tlie delegates to the city at this evening s sess.on. Mrs. John E. Moore, Kokomo, will make the response. SMITH KIN WIN RULING Sixteen cousins who are seeking to break the will of the late Delavan Smith, former part owner of the Indianapolis News, who left $3,000,000 to philanthropic institutions and to employes of The News, won the first round of the contest in Waukegan, 111. Judge Claire C. Edwards of the Circuit Court there overruled a motion of defense attorneys to dismiss the suit because names of all contestants were not signed to the bill of complaint. The court granted a motion to amend the bill to Include the names of all the cousins.
Dame Margaret came to the tea party after attending the Circle theater with her daughter, Miss Megan, Miss Margaret McCulloch, chairman of the State woman a committee to welcome the Lloyd Georges, and members of the Lloyd George party. Miss Megan had expressed a desire to see American movies, because English ones were “so poor.” "The Bad Man,” was the featured picture. Dame Margaret declared she thought the show "very, very good.”
Among those \vho have accepted Invitations to address the conference are William Randolph Hearst, Magnus Johnson and Henrik Shipstead, Minnesota Senators, and J. A. H. Hopkins, chairman of ihe "committee of forty-eight.” Samuel Untermyer, and Henry Ford, also hkve been Invited to speak. ( U S. LABOR PARTY PLAN DISAPPROVED BV STATE CHIEFS t Indiana Federation Leaders,; I Agree With Lloyd George. Lloyd George was right when, in a conference with local labor leaders Monday, he advised against organization of a labor party, officials of the Indiana State Federation of Labor said today. "Economics and politics mix like oil and water,” said Lloyd George. "That's right, they do,” T. N. Taylor, president of the State federation declared. “The American Federation is on record as opposed to a labor party. Thfeo or four resolutions tending to sponsor a labor party were turned down by the federation at its recent convention," said Taylor. However, some leaders pointed out, that does not mean that non-partisan politics and labor do not mix. It is understood that the Non-Partisan Political Action League, probably will support the candidacy of Edward Toner, Anderson newspaper editor, Yor the Republican nomination for Governor. "I think Lloyd George was just about right," said Adolph J. Fritz, executive secretary of the State Federation. "Prlnc pies of labor can be carried out through the old parties,” he sa.d. Labor makes up the old parties just as much any anybody else,” one official’ said. The hope of the working man rests not through formation of another party, but through obtaining the right men in the old ones, it was said.
DON HERR CAB CO. ENLARGE PLANT Former Furnas Bldg, Leased for Ten Years, Expected expansion of the Don Herr Cab Company. 11l S. Kentucky Ave., to business capacity four times Its present size was announced by Don Herr, manager and owner. Herr has secured a ten-year lease | on the old Furnas building, opposite his present location, from Walter i Goodal of the W. J. Holliday Company and Thadius R. Baker, formerly I of the Holliday Company. Included in the lease is an annex : one story high and 59 by 66 feet, which v. 11l be erected within a few weeks in the rear of tbe old building. The management will continue its policy of exclusive passenger transportation inter and Intra city. A modern repair shop and auto laundry will be installed in the new garage, which will offer storage accommodations to transient trade. Headquarters will be I moved Jan. 7. TABERNIEIY BECITYPROPERTY , (Continued From Pape 1) the mayor. “The tabernacle will take care of our needs for fifteen years, and could be rented out for private gatherings and, in a way, made self-support-ing. If we built a similar place it would cost thousands of dollars more, and would not be as nearly as good a location.” The mayor proposed that the ground west of the tabernacle be used as a farmers’ market. A temporary roof could be constructed for all-year use. He said the land might be rented as parking ground when no: in use as a market. The purchase of the land vrould give the city all the land In the block bounded by Alabama, New Jersey. Ohio and New York Sts., w.th the exception of the northeast section. Fire headquarters and the mun.c pal garage are on the northwest comer. Chamber of Commerce offic.als indorsed the movement in telephone conversation with the mayor today, and prom.sed immediate organized aid, Shank said. DRIVER IS EXONERATED John Reichert, 4034 Cairoliton Ave., was etxonerated on a manslaughter charge in city court today cn recoin mendatlon of Coroner Paul F. Robinson. Frank Showalter, Logansport, Ind., was fatally Injured when the truck, in w’hlch he was riding, ran into a ditch, Oct. 9, at Sixty-Third St. ai.d Alllsonville Rd., after being struck Ly Reichert's oar^^^
TUESDAY, OCT. 23,1923
STOKES POSES AS HISTORIAN TO GET ‘GOODS’ON WIFE • * Relatives of Wallace Refute Testimony of Millionaire as to Missouri Town. Bv United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—Helen 151wood Stokes never was In Bunceton, Mo., but W. E. Stokes was posing as a historian and seeking information concerning the little town’s inhabitants, depositions of Missourians read into the records of the Stokes divorce trial today declared. The plaintiff, having rested his case Monday, attorneys for Mrs. Stokes today began reading depositions taken when the former Denver girl made a trip to the Main St. town earlier this month, to secure evidence she was not in Bunceton in 1904 with Edgar T. Wallace, co-respondent. Did Not Visit Town Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Wallace, brother and sister-in-law of the engineer who is accused by Stokes of Improper relations with Stokes’ wife, testified Helen Elwood, as she then was known, had not visited Wallace in Bunceton. They said they would have known of such a visit, as the town was small. Mrs. Wallace said, however, she well remembered Stokes’ coming to 'Bunceton, saying he was a historian seeking information about the Santa Fe trail. Women Not Permitted A deposition of Dr. Peter E. Wil liams of St. Joseph, Mo., was to the effect that Mrs. Stokes could not have visited the Bunceton Club, as women witnesses for the millionaire plaintiff had testified, because, he explained, women were not permitted In the club. Edgar T. Wallace will take the stand today as a witness for Mr*. Stokes. Walaee, who arrived Monday from San Francisco, said his testimony "will prove a surprise." Heated arguments between the op posing counsels while Stokes was on the stand Monday marked the legal batlte as one of the bitterest in the present trial. The court came in for its share When Samuel TJntermeyer, chief attorney for Mrs. Stokes, took sarcastic digs at Judge Mahoney, who threatened several times to adjourn the hearing if the former didn’t curb his tongue.
WOMAN FLEES AS BANDITAPPEARS I 'Stick ’Em Up!’ Fails to Halt Mrs. Margaret Reynolds. “Now how could I tell you how that fellow looked wi-.en I did not wait to see him,” Mrs. Margaret Reynolds, 2311 N. Meridian St., declared after proving that speed 13 better valor when It comes to saving your valuables from a hold-up man. "That fellow stepped out of the 1 darkness at Twenty-Third and Mc- ! Pherson St., so suddenly. It seemed that he came from the sky,’ Mrs. Reynolds said. "When I felt something against my side and the command ‘stick ’em up,’ well I just left. I did not even take enough time to see what color he was. “From here on I will take the long way home and the well-lighted street. No more short cuts through dark, narrow streets. Why, I was scared sick.” ALLEGED BOOTLEGGERS DRIVE CAR INTO TRAP Two Arrested by Officers Who Arrange Reception. Lieut. Hudson nad squad found a five-gallon jug of liquor in a raid on a garage at 618 Buchanan St., but no owner was located. Patrolmen O’Brien and Barnett formed a reception committee and early today, J. D. Lee, 1829 Ringgold St., and Steve Long, 28, of 325 W. McCarty St., drove up with ten more gallons, police said. They were ar rested. Joe Sarbenoff, 36, of 602 E. Washington St., and Getrude Reed, 6128 Canal Blvd. were charged with operat.ng a blind tiger. Police reported discovery that Sarbenoff rented the Canal Blvd. house and that the woman operated a still there for him. WATERWAYS COMMISSION Governor Names Three to Co-operate With Other States Former Governor James P. Goodrich, G. I. Christie of Purdue University and W. A. Guthrie chairman of the State conservatio l commission, have been appointed by Governor McCray as members of the deep waterways commission authorized by the last legislature. The commission Is to co-operate with similar bodies from other States in the Great L&kes-St. Lawrence River waterway project. The governor also appointed Representative Addison Drake, Sullivan, and Representative Luke W. Duffey, Indianapolis, to represent Indiana os vice-presidents of the Great LakesSt. Lawrence Tide Water Association.
Number 19 By Times Special MARION, Ind., Oct. 22.—Their nineteenth child was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Huffman recently. Mrs. Huffman Is 44 years old. All the children are living. One set of twins is Included In the famil: t.
