Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 58, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1924 — Page 1
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VOLUME 36—NUMBER 58
TRANSFER OF MORGAN IS TALieNOW Commissioner Roy Haynes Said to Be Thoroughly Satisfied With Hoosier Director’s Work —Pressure of Politics Is Seen. CERTAIN SENATOR BY NAME"OF 'JIM' AT BAT / Watson Said to Have Another Man in Mind for Federal Prohibition Post —Shift to General Agents’ Office Probable. By C. A. RAXDAU Times Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, D. C.. July 16. Bert Morgan. Indiana State prohibition director m@y soon be transferred to the general agents force of the prohibition unit, it was intimated at prohibition headquarters this morning. It was learned that Commissioner Roy Haynes, who has just returned to the city is thoroughly satisfied with Morgan's work and regards him as an excellent State director, but that political pressure is being brought to bear against Morgan by a certain Senator, otherwise known as Jim Watson, and that Haynes may have to bow to political exigencies. Watson has another man in mind for Morgan's job though who this man is could not be learned. Watson also is credited with a grudge against Morgan. The initiative in the entire proceeding has come from Indiana, not from the prohibition headquarters in Washington. Haynes would like to have things go on as they now are but apparently fearer* 'he win be forced to transfer Morgan to the more mobile general force. Haynes is leaving Washington for Indiana bn Saturday and will speak at Winona Lake World League, against alcoholism on July 20. While In Indiana he may settle the Morgan matter it was’ stated here today.
MORGAN STANDS PAT Director Says He Will Not Resign —Working at Ft. Wayne. Bert C. Morgan, Federal prohibition director for Indiana, whose resignation is reported to have been asked by Roy C. Haynes, national prophlbition director, will not resign. He made this assertion In a tele phone conversation from Ft. Wayne, where he is conducting liquor raids on a large scale, today. “I do not care to give out any formal statement at this time,” Morgan ; said. He refused to discuss the re- ! port that his resignation had been j asked. Clyde A. Walb. of Lagrange. Re-1 publican State chairman, admitted j Morgan had told him at West j Baden last week the resignation i (Turn to Page 11) HOOSIERS CRACK SHOTS Indiana Army Men Win in Rifle Competition. Indiana men took first and second places in the first rifle competition at Ft. Niagara. N. Y., Monday, according to word received today. Sergt. Frank Morgan, Bth Infantry, Ft. Screvens. Ga., whose home la Angola Ind., led a field of fifty of the regular United States Infantry, with a score of 292 out of a possible 300. Capt. M. L. Broderick. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, tied with Sergt. C. Hakala of Ft. Screvens for second place, with a score of 285. Capt. J. W. McCormick. Indiana University, was tied for tenth place, scoring 280. HEALTH FILM FEATURE Program Will Be Given Thursday Night at Foreign House. Motion pictures and an exhibition by “The Mystery Man of Health” will feature a health program, open to the public, at the Foreign House of the Immigrants Aid Association. 617 W. Pearl St., Thursday evening under auspices of the society and the Marion County Tuberculosis Association. STEPS IN TRAIN PATH Companion Attempts to Pull Man to Safety. Ben Harris. 28, of 519 S. California St., employe of Kingan & Cos., was struck by an outbound Big Four express train near West St., shortly after noon, and seriously injured. He was taken to the city hospital. Miss Edna Wethington, 545 S. California Su, told police she was walking down the track with Harris on their way to work and saw the train. She reached to pull Harris out of the way and he misunderstood and •stepped Into the path of the train.
The Indianapolis Times
Cupid Flits About Julius Fleischmann, Millionaire Yeast King, Has Tough Luck in Matrimonial Ventures.
B \rx Service YNDS POINT. NEW YORK, July 16. —Julius FleischL_l mann, millionaire yeast king, is fast becoming prince of divorce doweries. He gave $2,000,000 to his first wife, upon their divorce in 1920, besides settling $25,000 a year on her. And he expects to give $5,000,000 to his second wife, as soon as the French courts free them from each other. Fleischmann believes in the “Golden Rule” and practices it to ify •••' : "i:% ; .:/
SECOND MFCS. FLEISCHMAN> the tune of several millions a year, smiling all the| time—though his heart probably is breaking. • • • Despite all his wealth* this millionaire manufacturer, polo player, politician, traveler. hasn't beer, able to get the devotion that the poorest workers on his payroll have enjoyed , But a sportsman all the time, he has taken his luck with a shrug of the shoulders, a laugh, and a trust that he wQI do better next time. "Six months from now I will he single egain.” he says philosophically. Anl then? * • • U yrjAYOR of Cincinnati for two |jvl| terms between 1900-1905, l—— l and president of the largest yeast producing plant in the world, Fleischmann rapidly became a figure of influence. He became a heavy stockholder in the Cincinnati ball club. Ha bought a fine racing stable and became an expert polo player himself. He married Miss Lily Ackerland and lived happily with her until j their divorce. Then he married Mrs. Lawrence I Heminway, divorced wife of the | silk manufacturer, who once was a i millionaire, but now is a cashier | in a rnovie picture place. After a prolonged honeymoon the newly-weds settled down on a magnificent estate on Long Island. All went well until Mrs. Fleisch mann met Jay O'Brien on the polo grounds.
O'Brien is an actor. He had been married to Mae Murray and Irene Fenwick, now Mrs. Lionel Barrymore. One look at him and Mrs. Fleischmann lost her heart. She told her huphand about it. j He did not bar O'Brien from his home. A year of heartbreak followed. but Fleischmann played the part of the sportsman through it all. Reconciliations wer o effected several tiroes. But they did not last. Mrs. Fleischmann sailed for FVance. O'Brien followed. Shortly after Fleischmann sailed, too. * But the husband was the only one to return. • • • HrS wife has already secured a divorce decree in Paris. I She is now spending the summer at Biarritz. O'Brien is waiting.*’ And Fleischmann is busying himself with his dogs and horses and his Long Island estate. Lord Wimbledon, captain of the English polo team that is coming to play before the Prince of Wales at the Meadow Brook Club this fall, has accepted an irvitation to stay at Fleischmann’s. The mistress of the house will not he there. But then, good sno/tsmen understand —and ask no tactless questions. Lewis Tours Kentucky John L. I-ewis, president of United Mine Workers of America, will spend the next few days in western Ken tucky, where he will address striking miners. The operators refused to sign anew contract the old one expired, it is said. Lewis left Indianapolis Tuesday.
BACK AT HER DESK Miss Green of Chamber of Commerce Recovers Health. Miss Elsie L. Green, assistant general secretary of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, who has been absgnt from her desk since March 8 as a result of ill health, has resumed her duties. RUSH AT CITY LIBRARY New Book Slacks Installed to Take Care of Patrons. The city library has outgrown its present equipment. In order to take care of increasing patrons it has been necessary to install more book stacks. A third floor of steel stacks, with a capacity of 80,000 books, is being installed. , MILLICENT LOSES RING Countes* Salm Plays Golf—Diamond Valued at $2,500 Missing. By United Preen NEW YORK, July 16.—While playing golf at the Shinnecock Golf Club, Southampton, Long Beach* Countess Salm Von Hoogstraten, formerly Miss Millicent Rogers, lost a diamond ring valued at $2,50'). A liberal reward has been offered. NOTIFIED SONS MISSING Crawfordsville Police Take Two Lads Into Custody. Mrs. James Donnelly. 131 W. McLean PI., and W. A. ’Shaul. N. Illinois St., were notified by police their sons, Theodore Shaul, 12, and Wililam Donnelly, 13. were missing. Chief of Police Shields of Crawfordsville, Ind., called police here and aaid he had the two bojs in custody. SHANK HORSE ENTERED Mayor Will Go to Montpelier Thursday for Races. The lure of fast horses will again attract Mayor Shank’s attention Thursday when he will attend races at Montpelier, Ind.. in connection with a fair in that city. The real reason for the mayor's interest is the fact his new horse, ‘Liberty Direct' is entered. Shank promised to forget clean-up campaigns and city budgets as he roots for his horse to cross the wire first. POISON - PLOT CHARGED Ohio Woman Said to Have Confessed Murder of Si.’.th Hu*band. By I niteel Preen MT. GILEAD, Ohio, July 16Charge of first-degree murder was to be placed against Mrs. Elnora Yeoman. 40, today following her alleged confession she fed poison tablets to Lewis Yeoman, her sixth husband. T. B. Mateer, Morrow County prosecutor, said Mrs. Yeoman had signed a confession. Her sixth husband died June 28. Later his body was exhumed and analysis of the stomach showed traces of poison.
WOMAN PUZZLES POLICE Found Wondering in Chicago Suffering From Mental I-apse. By United Press CHICAGO, July 16.—Police today sought to identify a 40-year-old woman who, was lound wandering aimlessly about the park row section of the Illinois Central Railroad, and who, because of mental lapse, was unable to give an account of herself. The woman talks incoherently and the one fact police have learned | from her is that she has a baby at home. Physicians have not determined cause of the mental lapse. STATE SELLS LAND Hammond ard Gary Firms Bid in j 16 Acres The State today sold more than sixteen acres of State land along the Grand Calumet River and in Lake George, I-ake County, to Hamtnand and Gary land interests for s2,SftO. The river parcel of eleven acres was appraised at $1,396, but $1,700 was offered. The Lake George parcel of 6ix acres, appraised at $1,087, was sold for $l,lOO. PRESIDENT OFFERS AID Message Expresses Concern at For-. est Fire Loss. By United Press WASHINGTON, July 16.—President Cooltdge today offered Federal aid to cope with the forest fire situation in California. The President sent the following telegram to Governor Richardson at Sacramento: “Have noticed with deep concern reports of the growing destruction from forest fires in your State- I trust you will advise me if effective aid can properly be extended by the Federal Government.” SAUNDERS LOSES AGAIN I Former Piggly Wiggly Head Can’t j Start New Chain. Bu United Press COLUMBUS. Ohio. July 16.—Clarence Saunders, whose sensational success and subsequent collapse as organizer of the Piggly Wiggly chain, grocery system, is now restrained from his lost millions through another such enterprise. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals today offirmed Federal Court at Memphis, Tenn., which granted an injunction to the Piggly Wiggly Corporation, restraining its former head from organizing a chain of stores similar to the Piggly Wiggly system-
INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1924
SFNIORIiy on big roue IS RESTORED More Than 1,000 Men Affected by Agreement Reached between Railroad Officials and Members of Workers' Union, CONTRACT FOR SHOP WORK TO BE CANCELLED * New Men in Service Will Be Released Where Their Retention Will Conflict With Older Employes, Order Reads, Over 1,000 men are Involved in an agreement made today by officials of System Federation No. 54, and Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago & St. T < uis Railway Company, whereby employes in service of the loebmotive department at Beech Grove shops v. hen closed down Feb. 21, 1922 shall be reinstated with full seniority rights if they make application within thirty days. About 700 are ex pected to return. \. The contract between the Railway Service and Supply Corporation, under which Beech Grove shops have operated since March 20, 1922, will be cancelled July 19, according to notices posted today. Goodrich President James P. Goodrich, former Governor. is president of the railway Service and Supply Corporation. All new men employed by the cor poration win be releaeed where their retention In service conflicts with an old employe. L. V. Hart, president o f the federation, said. The strike from July 1 to Sept. 23, 1922, inVolved the question of contracting shops, which took away benefits derived from the transportation act, a reduction of wages, and time and one-half for Sundays and holidays, a custom practiced by the company twenty years. Machinists, boiler makers, sheet metal workers, blacksmiths, electrical workers, helpers and apprenwere effected. Only about fifty men stayed. Letters to Be Sent At the time of the strike workmen drifted into other •shops, less preferable positions, and many left the city. Letters will be sent the men informing them of the agree ment. Agreement states that the wage scale negotiated in September 1923, ffTcetlve Aug 1, 1923, on remainder of the railroad, shall be recognized prevailing hourly wage rate in the shop. A roster showing names, of employes in service at time of strike will be posted before .scan. 1, 1925. Seniority will be based on last entrance to company’s service prior to Feb. 22, 1922.
PUPS SHOULD REJOICE Quarantine Tent for. Sick and Injured to Be Builti at- Bound. There was rejoicing in Puppvland, the city dog pound. 4400 Massachusetts Ave., today. Work will be started scon on a quarantine tent, for siqk and injured animals. This means that dogs suffering with distemper can be treated, and will not have to be killed. Dr. Elizabeth Conger, city poundmaster, said. The “tent” will be of ecncrete, with six cages and pix windows. It will cost at least SSOO. Miss Lenora. Haag. 2859 N Meridian St., is the donor. A fence, costing SSOO, and screens all around the dog pound also are gifts of Miss Haag. FUGITIVE SHOT DOWN Alleged Absconder Killed When He Resists Arrest. By United Preen ROCK SPRINGS. Wyo.. July 16 C. N. Fisher, alleged to have Vbsconded with the semi-monthly pay rail of the Gunn Quealy Coal Company, amounting to $5,000, was shot to death while resisting arrest at Gunn, Wyom. Fisher had been pursued for nearly twenty-four hours with airplanes and by posses in automobiles, on horseback and afoot.
Your Business—whether you are employer or employe, is to sell your servioes. If you ■'wn a business you are missing an opportunity every day you let. go by without an ad under the i’T'SINE S S ANNOUNCEMENT classification in The Times. If you are an employe and not satisfied with your work, why not advertise what you can do and locate the right Job A THREE-LINE AD THREE days in the times FOR ,!>!> CENTS. Call Main 3500 Ask for an Ad Taker THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES “Result* nt Minimum Cost”
Fair Umps Means Business
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MISS VIRGINIA PETERS AND CHARLES COMMONS.
wf-p^—ITR-RIKE two-o!” There's no arguing with the umpire, either, even though she is about half a head shorter than the hatter, and “only a girl.” For when Virginia Peters. 576 E. Fall Creek Blvd., head instructor on the playground at School 29, College Ave. and Twenty-First St., gives her decisions, large boys and small know that she means what she
250 HOMES BUI AS FOREST FIS IN WESTSPREAD; Flames Destroy Mine Properties—Drive Ranchers From Their Homes, Py I’nitrd Frrs* SAN FRANCISCO. Cal.. July 16. —Fires ninning through the forests of the Pacific coast centered their fury in northern California and northern Idaho today, with at least twenty-four persons missing and two injured. Fires in northern Idaho have destroyed 250 homes in Pine Creek : Canyon County, razed the buildings of the Nabob mine with a loss of $500,000 and were reported threatening the Constitution, mine. Mines Damaged In addition to damage done at the Nabob Mine, the surface workings of the Jim Plains, lJttle Pittsburgh and Douglas Mines, ail in the same district, have been destroyed. The fire in that district is still burning on a ten-mile front. Twenty employes of the Nabob mine are reported to have fled back Into the hills for safety and their present whereabouts are unknown. Several families fought their way through the belt of fire Tuesday j and reached safety. In the Pend Oreille country of j Washington, the towns of Lost '• Cregk, Tiger, Lacks, Cuisick and Blue Slide are stilj in the path of j a thirty-mile wide wall of fire, Wheeler's mill and fifty persons trapped there have been saved. Ranchers and their families, with their household goods have deserted their homes and gathered along the line of the Chicago Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, as a place of safety and means of further flight should it become necessary. In western Washington light rainfall put. out several smqll fires, checked others and today the situation there was greatly improved. Colonists Missing Four members of the Doukhobor colony living on Porcupine Creek, near Nelson, British Columbia, still were missing today, after the fire had raged between them and the -villages where other members of the colony, had taken refuge. Vastrtmber tracts in vicinity of the Doukhobor colony have been destroyed, two mills owned by the colony burned, and today the fire was advancing toward Porto Rica and Clearwater, British Columbia. FIRST AUTO-COACH TRIP Chicagoans Will Stop Here After Visit, to Seaboard. Twenty Chicagoans, composing the first auto-coach party that ever ma le a party trip from Chicago to the Atlantic seaboard, will arrirve in In dlanapolis, July 18, en route to Chicago. The party will stop at the Lincoln'. The tour, which covers 2,350 miles, is a departure in long-distance motor vacationing, and is the first of a series of similar trips to be made this summer under auspices of the Gray Line Motor Tours Company. I
Entered as Second-clas* Matter at Posfoffice. Indianapolis. Published Daily Except Sunday.
says, whether Bhe is informing Charles Commons, 812 E. TwentyFirst St,, that he has pitched another strike, or ordering a group of older boys to stop teasing a small one. Miss Peters, who is only 17 and a 1924 graduate of Shortridge High School, is the youngest head instructor on playgrounds this summer, according to the city recreation department. Eighteen years usually ir. the limit.
PREMIERS MEET FOR DISCUSSION OF REPARATIONS Fifteenth Conference Since Versailles Treaty Opens Today in London. By United Preen LONDON, July 16.—The fifteenth important interallied conference since the Versailles treaty was opened today In the spacious offices of Premier Ramsay MacDonald at tiie foreign office, where statesmen of ten nations gathered about a large horseshoe table for another discussion of reparations. In the eighteen months that ha.ve elapsed since the last fateful conclave at Paris in January. 1923, the French and Belgians invaded the Ruhr and Germany ceased payments. Europe Encouraged More recently, Europe took heart over the experts' report as a basis of settlement and it was to consider ways and means of putting this report into effect the present conference assembled. Standing in the doorway of his offices, MacDonald, labor premier, who will preside at his first inter-allied gathering, welcomed American Ambassador Kellogg and Col. James A. Logan Jr., Premier Herriot of France, accompanied by General Nollett, Ministers Destefani and Denava of Italy; Premier Theunis and Minister Hymans of Belgium; Viscount Ishii ar.d M. Hayashi. of Japan, besides officials and dignitaries from Portugal, Jugo Slavia. Greece and Roumania, and scores of experts and secretaries. All principal delegates were present when Premier MacDonald, in his address of ' welcome surveyed the general situation as it existed before the Dawes report was drawn up and urged importance of putting into effact the report as a whole, without alteration in any details. Two Conditions Two conditions were most essential, said the British premier, first to restore economic and fiscal unity to Germany and secondly, to give adequate security to the investors who have been asked to lend $209,000,900 to Germany. The British premier emphasized that the Dawes committee had eschewed politics and concentrated on business and economics and he hoped the conference would do likewise. The Dawes’ report had broken I new ground, he said, and was parI ticularly useful because it provided ; for payment of reparations and reconstruction of Germany. Carried Razor in Shoe Sergeant Brennan and squad ar- ; rested Chester Cqtton, colored, 30, of j 807 W. Twelfth St., and charged him with carrying concealed weapons. The officers say they found a razor in his shoe. HOURLY TEMPERATURE 6 a. m 64 10 a. m 77 7 a. m 66 11 a. m, 78 8 a. m 71 12 (noon) .... 79 a. m. 761 p. 82
KIWANIANS SCOUR FQ PATCH IN SEARCH FOR MISSING CLUB MEMBER v __ Hope Expressed That Dell Z. Billmire, Absent for More Than Week, Will Be Near Point Where Man Answerirlg Description Was Seen. FAMILY BELIEVES BUSINESS MAN SUFFERS HALLUCINATION Refrigerator Company Representative Left Office July 8, Failed to Go After Family in Southern Indiana Saturday. In the belief that Dell Z. Billmire, 49, of 719 E. Thirtyfourth St,, missing since a week ago Tuesday, is alive and suffering under an hallucination that he is pursued, more than seventylive members of the Indianapolis Kiwanis Club this afternoon conducted a search for him. Billmire is a member of the club. The Kiwanians were scouring a thirty-five-acre weed patch in the neighborhood of Thirty-fourth St. and the Monon railroad, where several colored boys said they saw a man answering Billmire’s description twice. Billmire’s family was notified that the boys saw this man late Tuesday afternoon. They first saw him last Friday afternoon, they said.
The clubmen felt certain that they would find Billmire and that the sight of his friends might dispell the suspected hallucination. Office July 8 The family had no other explanation for Billmire’s absence than that he was ili. He has not been at his office, where he is local representative of the Ligonier Refrigerator Company and the Dayton Money Weight Scales Company, since last Tuesday. Mrs. Billmire said that her husband was supposed to go to Clinton, Ind., after her Saturday, and when he failed to appear, she returned home Sunday to find him gone. All his personal belongings were found at his home. Police dragged Fall Creek near the Billmire home Monday. Close friends of Billmire stated tnat while ho was serving in the Spanish American War. he contracted malaria fever' and that in the last few years he has suffered during July and August as a result . He is thought to be wearing a heavy winter suit and a derby hat. Another Olew Seen Another clew was obtained by the club, when it was reported that a policeman had discovered a man lying in the brush along Fall Creek and thinking he was drung had ordered him op. Upon suggestion of Ed Rosenberg at the luncheon a call for Boy Scouts to aid in the search was sent to Scout Executive F. O. Belzer at the Scout camp, north of the city. BRUSH PILE SAVED Two City Fire Trucks Run TwentyTwo Miles to Blaze; Damage SSOO. With sirens blasting large holes in the rural atmosphere, cut-outs wide open and foot accelerators pressed against the floor boards, two Indianapolis fire department companies streaked it to Rosston, twentytwo miles north of here, in recordbreaking time today in answer to a hurry-up telephone call for help in fighting a fire which was said to be threatening to destroy the little Boone County hamlet. They arrived too late to save the home of John Taylor, but heroically extinguished a blaze in a big brush pile adjoining the house and saved the lives of one of Rosston’s prominent families of rabbits. Damage SSOO. UTILITY PLEAS GRANTED Merchants Light and Heat to Expend $351,000 —Issue Bonds. Three public utilities today petitioned the public service commission for authority to issue more than-sl,-600,000 worth of stocks and bonds to provide funds' for reimbursing treasuries of the company on account of capital expenditures to be made before Dec. 31. Petitioners: The Merchants Heat and Light Company, Indianapolis, $133,000 stock, $277,000 bonds; $351,000 to be expended. Wabash Valley Electric Company, Clinton; $387,000 bonds. $186,000 stock; $399,020.57 to be expended. Northern Indiana Power Company, $232,000 stock, $482,000 bonds; $524,834 to be expended. The city of Newcastle was authorized to sell $40,000 in water works bonds Leg Mashed by Car Ray Burns, 32, of 1242 Congress Ave., employed at the U-Drive Auto Service, 130 E. New York St., was caught between two autos today and had his leg crushed. He was taken to Methodist hospital.
Forecast SLIGHTLY cloudy tonight and Thursday with possibly local thunder showers. Somewhat cooler Thursday.
TWO CENTS
FALLING PRICE ON CASOLINE IS PREDICTED HERE Dealer Wars and State Action With Heavy Production Factors. Falling gasoline prices are in sight for Indianapolis and Indiana, dealers predicted today. Increased quantities of the product in storage! falling off in demand by large consumers of oil as result of adverse business conditions, increase in crude oil producting resulting In lowered prices, will bring about a drop In retail prices soon, they said. Already gasoline wars are in progress in various parts of the country. In Alban)', N. Y., prices have fallen 10 cents in a week, bringing the retail price to 12 cents a gallon. In New York City and other parts of the State the Standard Oil Company Tuesday cut prices 1 bents a gallon. In South Dakota the State has taken a hand in the fight, forcing the pric to 18 cents a gallon. These fights and general conditions in the industry will ultimately have their effect in Indiana, dealers said. In this State the lead always has been taken by the Standard Oil Company in setting prices. Prices are announced from offices of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana at Chicago, and frequently company officials here do not know of price changes until announced in the newspapers. Other Companies invariabi follow the lead of the Standard. Low test gas now is selling at 22.5 cents gallon, and high test at 26 cents In Indianapolis, including the State tax of 2 cents. A representative of the Standard Oil Company admitted Monday that the oil and gasoline market WMI weak. • MURDER ARRESTYEAR Schick Killing Will Be Solved Soon, Says Detective. Detective Inspector Jerry Kinney today said that he believes his men will be in position soon to file a specific charge against one of twelve men held in the investigation of the murder Sunday night of Chris Schick, 54. of 1736 English Ave. Schick is thought to have been an innocent bystander who was mistaken by men in an alleged gang fight for one of the participants. The fight occurred at English and State Aves. Kinney said detectives are searching for iwo more men, but he thought sufficient evidence had been gathered to direct suspicion of the fatal attack upon one of the men held. COMMITTEE IS NAMED Shank Names City Representatives at Riley Hospital Ceremony. A committee of city officials was appointed by Mayor Shank today to officially represent the city at ceremonies at the Riley Hospital. Oct. 2. The committee consists of Charles A. Bookwalter, chairmanFrank C. Lingenfelter, John F. \Kaikev, Martin J. HyW*. and R "W alter JkevsUv
