Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1924 — Page 6

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‘Galloping Henry’ Takes Indianapolis Times Explorers to D(\nville, Indiana With Distinction of Being, Scene of Gold Rush , Resulting in Proof None

Marshal Reeder, Who Is Chief of Police and Director of Public Works, Supervises Repair of Street, By JOHN L. NIBLACK, Who Is Rediscovering Indiana. “7HS the day broke cloudy, .r\ with promises of a drenching rain, the city editor at once decided it would be fitting to expose The Times explorers to the rigors of another trip into Indiana. “Looks like he could have sent us out yesterday when the sky was blue and pretty,” observed J. M. Moore, the argumentative staff photographer. “Come on. before you have to go take a picture of some third class politician kissing a baby or there is a murder to get a picture of," 1 urged, “It's about time for another, as there has been only one this week.'* Enter Henry Spurred by the thought we made a dash for Galloping Henry, the iron-hearted flivver that bears the discoverers on their tours, and soon were throbbing west. For about twenty miles Henry played tag with a milk truck going in our general direction. The first time the truck passed we had storped to view a threshing outfit in action. A little of that went a long way, however, reminding us both of periods in our youth when we had ahold of the long end of a pitchfork. We passed the milk truck twice more in the next ten miles, and would have caught it again, but J. M. started to tell one of the tales with which he enlivens the journeys "■Stop:” Says J. M. “Stop! See that place there?" he asked. We stopped. “I was coming down this road once about twenty-five miles an hour —” he started. “On foot?" I asked.

AID OF MOTHERS AND FARMERS IS SOUGHT BY BRIAN Vice Presidential Candidate Promises Move to Outlaw War, By United Press LINCOLN, Neb., Aug 19.—Charles W. Bryan, Democratic vice presidential nominee, makes his campaign appeal to mothers and farmers. His acceptance speech delivered here Monday night was given over to stressing advantages which the Democratic ranks offer to these two classes of voters. To mothers, Bryan promises “an equality with man in employment, compensation and jury service,” abolition of child labor, prohibition law enforcement and “outlawing of war" by means of referendums. To the farmers, he pledges tariff reduction, return of the Federal reserve system to its original purpose, development of waterways from Great Lakes to the Atlantic and to the gulf. State and national aid in co-operative marketing, creation of an exports marketing corporation and reclamation development for the West.

Davis Progressive Iryan hailed his running mate, John W. Davis, as “a progressive Democrat,” and his platform as the "most progressive platform covering the tried and practical measures for the economic freedom and prosperity of the people that has ever been promulgated by a national political convention.” He pledged all the energies of his party to “the outlawing of the war system.” While he did not mention specifically his objections to the observance of Defense Day, he said: "Wax propaganda, mobilizations, demonstrations of the civil and industrial resources of the country when we are at peace with the world, unnecessarily inflame the mind of the American youth, are a great economic waste and mislead the people of other lands as to the peaceful and friendly intention of the United States Government and should be discouraged by all friends of world peace. ‘‘The only hope of the world is found in the substitution of the machinery for peace in place of machinery for war.” In his pledge to the farmers, Bryan said: "The deflation policy of the Republican Administration advocated in its national platform 0f*1920 and indorsed in the speech of acceptance by its candidate for the presidency resulted in withdrawing bank loans and discounts of five billion dollars, contracted our currency by a billion and a half dollars, cut the prices of the farmers’ grain and livestock in half, destroyed the market value of his hands, threw thousands of farmers into bankruptcy and spread industrial depression and unemployment throughout the country. Mellon Plan Scored "The farmer needs a Democratic Administration and a Congress that will not jjermit the Mellon tax .plan

UPPER (LEFT TO RIGHT) THE “TWIN BRIDGES.” NEAR DANVILLE; MARSHAL JOHN REEDER (AT RIGHT) SUPERVISING GRADING OR MULBERRY ST.; DANVILLE NORMAL, WITH FOUNDATION OF NEW GYMNASIUM IN FOREGROUND. LOWER (LEFT TO RIGHT) GIRLHOOD HOME OF MRS. ROBERT LONG STEVENSON. TWO MILES FROM DANVILLE; VAN BUREN ELM, WHERE THE PRESIDENT WAS DUMPED OUT OF A STAGE COACH; DANVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH; COURTHOUSE.

With a withering glance J. M. bit off a chew of “Masterpiece” and ordered me to drive on. By this time the threatened rain had terminated in a shower, and through the clean windshield, which gets washed when it rains—we observed the milk wagon disappear up a long hill into a tree-clad village, which by the signs we saw to be Danville. Ix)ts of Courthouses The town is built around a town square containing a fine new courthouse, the fourth one, Hendricks County, has had since it was founded in 1824. Danville is doubly proud of the courthouse, as Plainfield and Belleville, other towns in the county, have aspired to be the county seat. In fact, when the county was laid out Belleville was so sure the county seat would be located there, on the National Rd., that a town befitting such a center was laid out, so Danville residents relate.

With the Candidates

PRESIDENT C O O L I D G E Forced to remain indoors by cold weather. the President called in a stenographer and started to catch up with his accumulated correspondence. JOHN W. DAVIS —The Democratic candidate attacked the problem of appointing a strategy board to aid in the campaign, conferring with George White,

to relieve the multi-millionaires from paying their Just share of the cost of Government.” Bryan also specifically indorsed the plank of the Democratic platform calling for development of Muscle Shoals. He also alluded to the issue of private monopolies which La Follette is stressing in his independent campaign. “The failure of the national Republican administration to force the law against private monopoly caused some of the States and State officials in the mid-west to enter the field of commerce for the purpose of establishing competition to protect the public from the unconsciable profiteer,” Bryan said possibly referring to his own efforts to lower gasoline prices, as Governor o f Nebraska. “In this way millions of dollars a year have been saved to the people in their coal, gasoline and oil bills.” Bryan also sanctioned the declaration of Davis pledging protection to labor against use of court injunctions in labor disputes. WEALTHY FARMER HELD Accused by Neighbor’s Daughter of Serious Charge. By United Press JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 19. —Faced with a charge of attempted criminal attack, Louis Crafton, wealthy young Clark County farmer, was held under bond today to the Circuit Court. Edna Lucas, 16, daughter of a neighboring farmer, charged that Crafton invited her for an auto ride and attempted to attack her as they were driving along a lonely stretch of road near here.

VETERAN PASTOR DIES Refused Remuneration for Preaching —Accepted Dime Once. By United Press ROCKPORT, Ind., Aug. 19.—The body of Rev. John Bunner, 92, one of the oldest Methodist ministers in the Middle West, was brought here today from Evansville for burial. The Rev. Mr. Bunner preached fifty-two years without pay. One time he accepted a dime for performing a marriage ceremony. Circus Honors Its Dead By United Press HAMMOND, Ind., Aug. 19.—Members of the Hagenbeck-Wallace circus held brief memorial services Monday afternoon at a monument on the Michigan Central tracks near Ivanhoc, marking the spot where eighty circus people were killed In a w’reck in June, 1918. Young Man Attempts Suicide Ralph Hoffman. 24, of 316 N. State Ave., is in city hospital today. Police said he took an anesthetic in an alleged suicide attempt in a fit of despondency.

More excitement prevailed in Danville u few years ago when the roof of the old hall of justice descended with a crash than at any time since the Confederates fired on Ft. Sumter. Following a day when the courthouse had been packed with spectators at a murder trial, the citizens were aroused about 8 p. m by a terrific boom, and investigation showed anew courthouse was In order. Hogate on Job A visit was made by the explorers to Julian D. Hogate, portly editor of the Danville Republican, who was found arrayed in a leather apron. It was his busy day, getting out the Thursday edition, which is the only cne of the week. As the name signifies. Editor Hogate is not 8 very ardent Democrat. He is a brother-in-law of Senator Ralston however, and was one of the most enthusiastic attendants at the na-

Ohio, and Isadore Dockweiler, Cal. He also discussed the question of extending his speaking tour to the Pacific Coast, which was urged by Dockweiler. SENATOR LA FOLLETTE — La Follette took a day of rest preparing for his conferences in the next few days with Senator Wheeler, his running mate and leader of his campaign.

ROTARIANS TAKE TRIP Journey to Frankfort, Ind., for Annual Picnic. Undaunted by leaden skies. Rotarians, their wives and families went to Frankfort, Ind., today for an all-day picnic of Group 5 Rotary Clubs. The trip was made from Indianapolis by automobile and special interurban. Program included a basket dinner at noon, dinner in the Frankfort Masonic Temple tonight and athletic contests. The feature was a golf tournament, the winner of which will enter a district tournament. Indianapolis was to send in five foursomes. Rotarians not attending the picnic arranged for their regular luncheon at noon at the \ Claypool. DEMOCRATS TO ‘HUU F4ftl District Meeting Being Held In Vigo County City. Miss Gertrude McHugh, secretary, and Walter S. Chambers, chairman of the Democratic State committee, with Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, Democratic candidate for Governor, and other candidates went to Terre Haute today for the Fifth district organization meeting. The meeting was to be an all-day affair. According to announcement at headquarters, John W. Davis, candidate for President, will make speeches at Indianapolis, Evansville and Ft. Wayne. POLICE SEEK GIRL-WIFE Mrs. Clara West, 15, Missing After Arrest of Husband. Police are searching for Mrs. Clara West, lb. Her husband, Oscar West, 24, of 223 E. Michigan St., was arrested Monday on a charge of contributing to delinquency. According to Mrs. Irene Stewart, with whom the young couple lived, the girl, who, she said, has been married a week, left shortly after her husband was arrested. Police were told that she left with another man in an automobile. Two Injured in Crash By Times Special LOGANSPORT, Ind., Aug. 19. Byran Zeck, 27, was lying at the point of death today, as result of Injuries received when his auto left the road on a hill. Edmund Wilburn, 38, was also seriously hurt. Boy Bitten by Dog JJames Hampton, 5, 610 Spring St., is suffering today from a wound on his right hand inflicted Monday when he wa3 bitten by a dog owned by L. G. Seaton, 718 E. North St. Police are observing the dog. The difference between a wave and a current is that a current is a stream of water moving in the sea, while a wave is merely a movement on the surface.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

tional Democratic convention in New York. Details of the “gold rush of ’99” were given us by Hogate. It seems some wandering Indian—at least, he said he was an Indian—came through Danville about twenty-five years ago and cryptically remarked “there is plenty of gold within two miles of this town.” The Indian said it was an old tradition handed down in his family. Earth, Nothing Else The populace immediately fixed on a mound about two miles out of town as the site of the buried treasure, and decamped en masse to the spot on foot, riding bicycles, on horses and any way to get there. Vast quantities of earth were overturned by the prospectors, but no goid was found. Geologists have since suspected the "Indian mound” is nothing but a little round hill, but the town still remembers the excitement of the gold rush.

COUNCIL CHANGES CITY ORDINANCES ON AUTO PARKING Move of Citizens Traffic Committee Fails to Pass, Several new traffic changes were on the way to become city ordinances today, following council action Monday night. A measure providing flat-to-curb parking on Washington St. between Delaware St. and Capital Ave., failed to receive a majority vote. With the count deadlocked 4-4, Councilman John E. King tried to kill the measure by striking it from the files. After protest by Councilman Lloyd D. Claycombe that council should honor recommendations of the citizens traffic committee, the motion was lost with only Heydon W. Buchanan and King voting favorably. Traffic ordinances passed provide fifteen-minute parking on Meridian 3t. between Washington St. and Monument PI.; flat-to-curb parking around city market except on Market St. from Alabama to Delaware Sts., and parking on Forty-Sixth St. between College Ave. and the Monon Railroad.

Zoning Protests Thirty property owners in the vicinity of Fifty-Seventh St. and Central Ave., opposed a business district there. M. J. Abbott. 6760 Central Ave., presented a remonstrance, pointing out residents had access to business corners on College Ave. Only one citizen appeared in hearing for changing the southwest comer of Martindale Ave. and Thirtieth St., from residential to business. Sentiment was favorable to the change. Another zoning amendment would change the northeast corner of Roosevelt and Cooper Ave. from residential to business. Action on all zoning amendments was continued. The only ordinance introduced was a measure transferring $181.06 from the gasoline fund in the building department to material and supplies fund. Investigation Move Fails Councilman Buchanan opposed transfer of $3,700 to the telephone fund in the board of works, demanding an investigation of how much was being spent for telephone service. His motion failed to receive a second. Council then authorized payment of $3,900.62 for the automatic telephone system in city hall, after the North Electric Manufacturing Company of Gallon, Ohio, which Installed the systed, protested four months’ delay in paying the bill. Other measures passed: Giving Jesse C. Moore right to lay switch across Seventeenth St., east of Mill St. Transferring SI,OOO from miscellaneous police fund to police new motorcycle fund. Transferring $4,000 from municipal garage fund to public buildings and repair fund.

Sheriff Charles T. Clark was next interviewed on the state of crime in Hendricks County. Five persons at present are the only county Doarders. Two are in for chicken stealing, one for stealing a coat and hat at Walnut Gardens, one charged with operating an auto while drunk and the last with intoxication and child desertion. Not So Much Booze Knowing Sheriff Clark has had considerable trouble with rum runners hauling liquor from the oases around Cjinton, Ind., through his county, to the great desert of Indianapolis, I asked him about that. “There's not so much liquor being transported now,” he said. “For one thing, the courts are harder on the runners, and, then, you see it doesn’t pay as well as it did. Liquor is so cheap in Indianapolis, They can get all they want that's made right at home.” J. M. by this time had taken a pic-

HEIRESS STILL MYSTERY Mrs. Magell Dailey to Return Home —"Mother" Missing. Still the center of mystery. Mr*. Magell Dailey, 19, of Salt Lake City, Utah, said to be heiress to $300,000 today announced she would return to her home at once, according to her attorney, Godfrey Yaeger, J. F. Wild Bank Bldg. A woman who said she was Mrs. W. E. Fife of Salt Lake City, “mother of Magell Daiiey," was missing. Mrs. Dailey came to Indianapolis Monday from the home of her hui>and's parents in Knightstown. Ind. They had quarreled over finances, it was said. A Mrs. W. E. Fife of Salt Lake City telegraphed she had no daughter and knew nothing of Mrs. Dailey. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen be- j long to; Sam Merrill, Hindsboro, 111., stolen ! from Meridian and New York Sts.; Cecil Bowell, 940 N. Gray St., stolen from Union Station; B. M. Bouslog, Newcastle, Ind., stolen from Newcastle, Ind.; C. B. Mayer, 2261 N, Meridian St., stolen from Delaware and Market Sts.; C. J. Fisher, 741 E. Washington St., stolen from Davidson and Washington Sts.; J. F. Stinnett, 315 Oxford St., stolen from I New York and Meridian Sts.; J. A. Shea, 2619 Highland PI., stolen from South St. and Capitol Ave.

BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found belong to: Timothy Donlan, 3734 N. Capitol Ave.; C. J. Millz, 605 E. Market St.; Ftank Scherer. Cicero, Ind.; Edgar Freese, Edinburg, Ind. PUBLIC DANCING SCORED Policewoman Reports Dancers Are Violating Police Orders. Apparent laxity in the observance of rules for daitcing in public dance haljs is being noticed, it was reported to Chief of Police Herman F. Rikhoff by Policewoman Nell Dunkie today. She said that cheek to cheek dancing was found at the Lyric ballroom. A clean-up in conditions in public dance h?vlls was instituted by the police several months ago. Reitreat at Notre Dame By United Press NOTRE DAME, Ind., Aug. 19. In complete retirement from world affairs, 6CO professional and business men were In attendance today at the annual laymen’s retreat at Notre Dame. McCulloch to Speak By Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Aug. 19. Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, Democratic candidate for Governor, will be the chief speaker at a Democratic conference here, Aug. 20. Other candidates will be present. Auto Salesman Killed Bn Time3 Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Aug. 19. Injuries received when his auto plunged into a ditch off of Dix Bee Highway proved fatal to Charles Yates, 48, of Linton, Ind., employed as an auto salesman at Indianaoolis.

ture of the Christian Church and w$ went down to look at the K. of P. hall. The building was erected eighty years ago for a Presbyterian church. The congregation fell out over something and the church closed its door. Then the lodge bought it. Two years ago the structure was covered with veneer of brick and modernized. Beams and sills of yellow poplar fifty feet long, hewn from single logs, were discovered as good as the day they were put in place, speaking eloquently of the days when Indiana’s rolling prairies were covered with majestic forests. Snaps Twin Bridges Our next stop was at the Twin bridges. Here a wagon bridge crosses a stream just outside the town, and the Big Four railroad croses both on a high fill and concrete bridge—a beautiful spot. Luring J. M. through a briar patch to the top of a sixty-fbot bluff we got a picture. The fleecy white clouds,

ACTVEVETERAN CALLED TO RES! Was State Legislator for Several Years, A long, active life was closed with the death of Alexander Hess, 85, of Wabash, Ind., Monday at the home of his son, Lawrence E. Hess, f23 Central Court. Mr. Hess had been ill since he came to Indianapolis in Februury to visit the son and a daughter, Mrs. George W. Warmoth. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Wabash. Burial in Wabash. Mr. Hess was one of the first volunteers in the Civil War. He was a war prisoner in the jail at Charleston. S. C., the workhouse at Atlanta. Ga.. and Libby Prison, at Richmond, Va. While in military prison, he was commissioned a captain in Company F, 2nd Indiana Infantry. After the war, Mr. Hess began law practice in Wabash. He was a member of the Indiana General Assembly in 1879, 1881 and 1891. 116 was prosecuting attorney for the judicial circuit including Cass, Miami, Wabash and Carroll counties. From 1894 to 1898 he served as clerk of the Indiana Supreme and Appellate Courts.

Mr. Hoss had been a Mason sixtyfive years. He was a past commander of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Laura Hess, who married Mr. Hess more than fifty-one years ago; four children, Lawrence E. Hess, Mrs. Warmoth, Mrs. C. J. Sindeman of Wabash and Mrs. C. C. Colbert of Elkhart, Ind, and sever, grandchildren. KLAN WEDDING HELD Newlyweds Will Also Live Above Headquarters. By Times Special ALEXANDRIA, Ind., Aug. 19. Miss Dorothy Josephine Stewart and the Rev. Harry Omer Hybarger, pastor of the First Christian Church, were married in the regalia of the Ku-Klux Klan, before a fiery cross. Five thousand Klansmen were witnesses. What's more, the newlyweds will live over the Beardsley store, the Klan headquarters. Ten Hurt In Accidents By United Press ANDERSON. Ind., Aug. 19.—Ten persons were injured in auto accidents in Madison County during the past twenty-four hours. Mrs. Edith Kinney, 33, of Columbus, suffered a broken arm when the auto driven by her husband overturned. Grand Jury to Hear Dispute James Mason, 509 W. Chesapeake St. ,and William Thomas, 543 S. Capital Ave., both colored, arrested Aug. 1 after a dispute over an alleged craps game, were bound over to the grand jury today on charges of assault and battery with intent to kill. Veterans to Bowl Rainbow Division Veterans’ Association will hold a meeting at 6 p. m. Wednesday to organize bowling teams for the fall and winter. H. E. Cook will be in charge.

the stream and the blue sky against the green woodlands and meadows pleased us. “Now I would like to see a ninefoot rattlesnake all coiled up, so’s I could take a picture of him and then you could kill him and save the rattles, observed J. M. The bare thought of such a possibility hurried the reporter back to Galloping Henry, parked in front of a farm house, the inmates of which viewed us through closed shutters suspecting we were bootleggers. I think. “What's the matter with this Lizzie now?” asked J. M. “Sounds like the front end is coming off.” Lizzie Tied Together After a little investigation we tied the crank up and put a piece of cloth under a broken catch on the hood, happily eliminating two of the latest rattles. A search of the village revealed Town Marshal John Reeder at work

VAYHINGER RITES HELD IV. C. T. U. Leader Laid to Rest in Crown Hill. j The body of Mrs. Culla Johnson I Vayhinger, who died Friday at her I home in Upland. Ind., rested today ;in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Vay- | hinger. who had been active in State and national W. C. T. U. work for years, was buried Monday, following services at the Roberts Park M. E. Church. W. C. T. U. leaders, including Miss Anna Gordon of Evanston, 111., national president, took part in the services. Mrs. Vayhinger was the wife of Monroe Vayhinger, former president of Taylor University at Upland.

JEFFERSONVLLE VEXESKENIUCKY Lax Methods Charged to Hoosier Gretna Green, By Times Special JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 19. —Louisville, Ky., just across the Ohio River from this Hoosier county seat, is vexed with alleged lax methods of issuing marriage licenses to Kentucky couples, many of whom are mere youths and children, it is said by social and juvenile officials. Jeffersonville is the Gretna Green of the Kentucky city, it is said. Last Saturday and Sunday more than twenty Kentucky couples were married by Jeffarsonvilie squires here. Louisville* authorities complain many of the marriages are the result of short acquaintance, or the culmination of ‘parties.’ It is claimed one 13-year-old girl was granted a license by the local clerk. Perjury in giving false ages and residences by applicants Is committed, it is said. Hospitals, charitable institutions, divorce courts and jails are all called Into use in handling the problems presented by the hasty, Illegal marriage, oftentime, of Incompetents and children, and their offspring, the Louisville authorities maintain. CLERKS PLAN OUTING Ik>cal Organization of National Federation to Frolic Sunday. National Federation of Postoffice Clerks, Local No. 130, and auxiliary will hold their annual picnic at Broad Ripple Park Sunday. A program of baseball, horseshoe pitching, swimming contests has been arranged. A basket dinner will be held in the evening and a ride on the Sunbeam. Mrs. Frank Boswell of the auxiliary and Albert Greatbatch head the committees. . Saxophone Theft Charged Charles Brown, 18, colored, 2402 Indianapolis Ave., was arrested today on grand larceny charges in investigation of theft of a saxophone valued at S6O from Virgil Moore, musical director at a downtown theater. Members of Parliament who are absent from the House of Commons without the speaker’s permission are st'll liable, under a law of the time of Henry VIII, to lose their pay.

TUESDAY, AUG. 19, 1924

Town Was There { Normal School, Which Is Building New Gymnasium, Is Alma Mater of Hoosier Notables —President Fell in Mud, supervising the grading of Mulberry St., for a new' surface. Marshal Reeder is at once the chief-of-police and head of the department of public works. At present the town is split on the question of whether to buy anew fire engine. Any time you want an argument, just ask some resident about it. A Democratic town board, the first in history, sprung the issue, saying the two hose carts, manned by a volunteer department, are not sufficient protection since the water pressure got low. After circling the Danville Normal College, founded in 1876, several times we finally found an opening in the trees and took a picture, which included a view of the new gymnasium now under construction. Students are furnishing the labor. ' We were told' the college is an “up and comer,” with attendance of 1,000 each year, including all terms, and that Senator Ralston and other notables graduated there.

On our way back we stopped to take a look at an old farm house, thei girlhood home of Fanny Van De" Grist, who later married Robert Louis Stevenson and who is now buried beside him in the South Sea Islands. J. M. took a picture of the Van Buren elm in Plainfield, beside the National Rd. When Van Buren was President he was opposed to further appropriations for internal improveI ment, Including the National Rd., it was said. On a trip to St. Louis the stage coach driver purposely upset the coach and the President was thrown into a mad hole beside the elm, to Impress the necessity of better roads. The D. A. R. has placed a tablet on the tree, which latter shows the wear and tear of time. No mud holes were observed in the pavement of the National Rd between there and Indianapolis, so it Is evident the spill must have had the desired effect sooner or later. Henry, however, did get stuck in a ditch when we backed too far In turning around, and it was only by grace of J. M.’s prodgious heaves that we are able to be back in Indianapolis to tell you about it.

PLEDGE SUPPORI FOR DEFENSE DAY Local De Molay Chapter' Favors Program, Indianapolis Chapter Order of De Molay was on record today as being heartily In accord Eugene Reid was advanced to senPIERCE ior councillor and George Wilson, first line officer, was elected junior. Marshal Dafoe, retiring master, installed the new officers. RIFLE TEAM SELECTED James T. Bugbee and Cary G. Dunn Will Go to Camp Bugbee. The sth Corps Area rifle team which will compete in the annual matches at Camp Perry, Ohio, Sept. 1-20, will be represented by James T. Bugbee, 1532 Park Ave., and Cary G. Dunn, Penn Art Apts. They were selected from more than 4,000 men in training at Camp Knox, Ky. They will compete with teams from the eight other corps areas throughout the country. THEFT SUSPECT HELD Colored Man Accused of Breaking Into Store. William Brown, 27, colored, 339 W. Eleventh St., was arrested today on charges of burglary and grand larceny. Detectives said he was the man who broke the window of a store owned by Samuel Nathanson. 439 Indiana Ave., and taking jeweiiy valued at S6O. Girl, 14, Takes Poison By United Press NEW HARMONY, Ind., Aug. 19. —Helen Johnson, 14, swallowed poison because her father refused to let her go to a movie. Her brother found her in the front yard a few moments later. United Brethren Elect By United Press HARTFORD CITY, Ind., Aug. >9. —O. M. Wilson of Warren assumed his duties as presiding elder and W. C. Galbraith of Rugby as treasurer today of the White River Conference of the United Brethren Church, following a meeting at Fairview, near here. NO TIME TO HUNT for a debtor or drug store when suddenly seized with agonizing intestinal cramps, deadly nausea and prostrating diarrhoea. CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY gives instant warmth, comfort and esse from pain. Never fails.