Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1924 — Page 12
12
OLD PARTKS HOPE TO WIN NEBRASKA BY ELECTION DAT Leaders Admit La Follette Now Has Edge in State. By LOWELL. MELLETT. Times Staff Correspondent. LINCOLN, Neb., Sept. 29.—Taking your information from Republican and Democratic leaders and editors, put Nebraska down as another La Follette State. Some Republicans think Coolidge may be able to take the State away from him by November: some Deraorats think Davis may do it, but nearly all agree that if the election were held now La Follette would obtain the State’s electoral votes. Just now in the Republican organization most thought is being given to ways and means of preventing Senator George W. Norris from becoming irritated to the point of declaring himself for La Follette. If he should do so it is agreed that nothing would stop the independent presidential ticket. Above all it is the purpose of the j Republican organization that no conservative Republican shall break loose with an independent candidacy against Norris. There is genuine fear that it may happen, since Lu- ; ther Brewer came out against Brookhart in lowa. If it should happen Norris doubtless would feel free to declare himself for La Follette, •whereas thus far he has only made clear his disapproval of Coolidge. This he did in a speech at Grand Island last Wednesday, when he also declared his belief in the propriety of senatorial candidates following the wishes of their constitutents rather than orders of their national party organizations. Republican and Democratic lead- ! ers when asked where I<a Follette’s (strength lies always name the farm- ' ers first. The railroad men have i been actively at work for weeks and labor is believed to be unanimous for him. In consequence there are predicitions that he will run even with the other candidates in Omaha after coming up to the metropolis with a 1 substantial lead. Both Republican and Democratic Stat eorganizations are working feverishly. The former, it is said. Is putting more paid workers in the field than have been seen in many a national campaign. The leaders ray they expect a reaction against the Progressive platform before the middle of October and want to be in a position to take advantage of it. Governor Bryan has made a good many speeches, but mostly in small I towns. Here in Lincoln, stories emanating from Chicago to effect he is laying down on his running mate are discounted. On the contrary, it is declared the national committee has treated Bryan unsympathetically and has failed to utilize his services to the best advantage Democrats, who say that Bryan could have been re-elected Governor without difficulty, say also he has not helped the national ticket } in his own State. Omaha and Lincoln welcomed Wheeler enthusiastically. His attack on Dawes banking history and his praise of Norris’ work in the Senate met thunderous response in I both cities. Freed Without Bond Orva Wineman, 292 Minkner St., charged with violation of the Mann act, is free today without bond, but is under orders from Judge A. B. Anderson to appear in Federal Court kfor trial at the next term of court.
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Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western R. R. Shortest Line Fastest Time Lowest Fare To KANSAS CITY and BEYOND Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, California New “Capital to Capital” Limited Leaves Indianapolis 3:30 p. m. daily. Arrives Decatur 8:35 p. m. Springfield, lll„ 10:00 p. m. Parlor Case Car Indianapolis to Springfield; Standard Sleepers Springfield to Kansas City. C. A A. Leaves Springfield 10:35 P. M. Arrives Kansas City 7:45 A. M. A A For Any Information or Ptillmn* Reservations Apply to Ticket Agents. City Ticket ° ffice > 38 W - Ohio St. Circle 4600 Union Station ficket Office, Main 4567. I* B. JA\ t General Room 30H C. I. A W. Building:,
Exposition Building Is Made a ‘Thing of Beauty’
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Viw showing interior of new exposition building at the State fairground in which the second annual Indianapolis Industrial Exposition is to be held, Oct. 4 to 11,
MAY REROUTE ‘CENTURY’ La Porte Hears Crack Trail May Avoid New Carlisle. By Times Special LA PORTE, Ind.. Sept. 29Little credence vvas pinced in a report current today that the Twentieth Century, crack New York Central flyer between Chicago and New York City, was to be re-routed over the Michigan Central lines between Chicago and Buffalo, N. Y. A recent ruling of New Carlisle, a small village near here, requiring all trains passing through the town to limit speed to eight miles an hour, is believed to have had a part in starting the rumor. The slow gait required cuts down the Century’s time considerably. Surveyors are at work daily laying out a connection between the main lines of the New York Central and Michigan .Central Railroads, however. The change will necessitate the changing of the entire business district of Porter. The reason assigned for this is the electrification of the Illinois Central lines, which the Michigan Central now uses from Kensington into the Chicago stations. NO CHANCES TAKEN Police Galore Aid in Capture of Elusive Suspect. A “tip” to police that Evans Coffey. 35, colored, of 270S Highland PI:, suspected north side burglar who had escaped from police headquarters last Tuesday, was at 420 E. Sixteenth St., brought the police emergency squad in charge of Sergeant Tooley, laden with detectives, two other squads in charge of Lieutenants Hudson and Stoddard and motorcycle officers Griffin and Johnson, to the scene. Officers found him at a house across the alley, hiding under a bed. Charges of burglary and grand larceny, and resisting arrest were placed against him and his bond set at SIO,OOO. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen belong to: Clarence Cobh, 622 E. North St., Ford, from 304 N. Senate Ave.; Julian C. Fix. Summittville, Ind., Ford, from Market ar.d Pennsylvania Sts.; Joseph Jacobson, 602 E. Forty-Sixth St., Ford, from 36 S. Capitol Ave.; Frank G. Brums, 431 S. Alabama St., Mitchell, from Belmont Ave. and Washington St.; Gus Caito, 309 S. Alabama St., Reo truck, fropn Maryland and Delaware Sts.; Ralph Jones, 2009 Dexter Ave., Maxwell, from Ohio St. and Capitol Ave.; Alexander J. Schwarz. 4218 Cornelius Ave., Ford from New York and Illinois Sts.; Henry Aichele. 2421 S. Meridian St.., Ford, from Wilkins and Meridian Sts. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Charles Pahud, 3403 Boulevard PI., Star, found at Massachusetts Ave. and Hazel Sts.; Willard Storage Battery Company, 914 N. Senate Ave., Ford, found on Fall Creek bridge and Meridian St.; Charles Braun, 322 Parkway Ave., Ford, found at South and Pennsylvania Sts.; Lawrence Larson, Attica, Ind., Ford, found at Capitol Ave. and Louisiana St.; Clyde M. C. Crary, 1324 W. Thirtieth St., Maxwell, found at Ohio and Illinois Sts., and Robert Playton, 2747 Shelby St., Ford, found at Capitol Ave. and North Sts. Roadhouse Padlocked By United Press NED ALBANY, Ind., Sept. 28. The Valley View roadhouse near here was under padlock today on order of Judge Harris in the Floyd County court. An injunction will be sought to close the place permanently. The roadhouse has been the seen eof several shooting frays.
under direction of the Chamber of Commerce. The great area of the structure makes it necessary for workmen to use bicycles in getting from one place to the other. Every man
TEXAS DECLARES WAR ON DISEASE Slaughter of 2,000 Head of Cattle Ordered, By United Press HOUSTON, Texas. Sept. 29.—With all agencies. Federal, State, county and local leagued together and with Governor Pat Neff personally directing activities, the fight against the hoof and mouth disease w;ts launched in all southeast Texas today. First steps on the program of eradication of the disease, declared by Governor Neff to have brought j Texas face to face with the great- 1 est crisis in the history of the State, will be the slaughter of nearly 2,000 head of condemned cattle, the prop-1 erty of Dr. William S. Jacobs, Thom- ! as C. Dunn, Jr. and Perrq Mr Fad den, prominent ranchmen. The condemned cattle are all on ! the restricted area of 6,500 acres, around which a cordon of guards j have been placed since the disease j was first discovered. From Far and Near Homes for starving deer are being: sought by the Department of Agri-; culture. Persons willing to pay j transportation charges—about $35 ! each —are welcome to one of the j male deer in Kaibab national for- ' est in northern Arizona, providedj they live east of the Sierra Nevadad ; and Cascade mountains. Edward L. Doheny Jr., son of the California oil ..magnate, has been re elected trustee of the University of Southern California by the Southern California conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. But a resolution was adopted asking that in event oil scandal charges against Doheny are sustained his connection with the university be terminated. Yeggs used crowbars and pried the door off a safe in a Chicago furni- j ture store. The safe was unlocked \ and empty. In attempting to curb speeding. Chicago police have arrested 2,216 persons in the past nint days. The Chicago auto death toll for 1924 stands at 498. A shabby boy who told police officers in Ohio and West Virginia when they happened to pick him up that he was a stable boy has been identified as the 17-year-old runaway daughter of J. C. Cline, wealthy resident of Grafton, W. Va. Simmons in Stop Over William Joseph Simmons, founder \ of the Ku-Klux Klan, former Im- | perial Wizard and Emperor, stopped : in Indiajiapolis en route to Co- j lumbus, Ohio, during the week-end. j Williajns said his new organization, j Knights of the Flaming Sword, is j purely fraternal, while promoting | white supremacy, and is not out to ! light the Klan. Poison Victim Improves Mrs. Margaret Hamilton, 507 S. j Alabama St., is improved today from \ the effects of poison taken Sunday, j The doctor on the city hospita 11 ambulance said he did not believe j she had taken enough to prove serious. She said she drank the poison after a quarrel with her j husband. Auto Tliief Hunted Police searched today for a young j man who they say attempted to steal ! an auto owned by Howard Davis. I Greencastle, Ind., parked at Capitol j Ave., near Georgia St, Davis fright- j ened the man away and .gave police a description.
The Indianapolis Times
working on the decorations carries with him a whistle with which to signal from one part of the building to the other. Exhibitors will begin moving exhibits into place Monday morning.
•BATHTUB OF THE AIR Unique Plane With Motorcycle Engine Entered in Air Races. Fifty miles on a gallon of gasoline is the claim made for the “aerial bathtub” by Etienne Dormoy, technical engineer at McCook Field, who h;ts entered the plane in two of the light plane speed and efficiency contests at the international air races, at Dayton, Ohio, Oct. 2 to 4. The plane which was invented by Dormoy is anew departure in airplane construction, having no fuselage. the tail piece of the ship being connected to the plane body by thin rods and wire. It has a wing spread of twenty-four feet, and is built of a lightweight metal. In all with a full load the plane weighs 380 pounds and is constructed for a lightweight pilot. Tank holds two gallons of gasoline and with a motorcycle engine for motive power, is capable of making 100 miles, Dormoy said. x GRAND JURY GETS CASE .Motorist Mleged to Have Been Speeding When Man Was Struck. George Taylor, colored. 1701 Yandes St., was bound over to the grand ury in city court today, on an involuntary manslaughter charge. Coroner Paul F. Robinson said investigation of the death of Charles Floyd, colored, 843 \V. Pratt St., who was struck by a machine driven by Taylor on Aug. 31 at Indiana Ave. and North St., that Taylor was speeding. Motor Policemen Pettit and Tague investigated. WOMAN LOSES ARM Injuries Sustained in Auto Accident Result in Amputation. Mrs. Charles Fiesler, 55, of Hollis, N. Y., is suffering from the loss of her right arm today, and Charles Johnson, his wife, and son of New York are nursing slight injuries after Johnson’s machine ran into a ditch Saturday near Danville, Ind. Mrs. Fiesler was brought to he Methodist Hospital where her arm was amputated. Y. M. C. A. PLANS DRIVE State Organization to Start Membership Drive, Oct. 2ft. A State wide drive for membership in Y. M. C. A. will be made week of Oct. 20, C. A. Teebaugh, State secretary, said today. The campaign will be conducted on a competitive basis, with Gary, Michigan City, la Porte, Huntington, Peru, Munrie, New Castle, Lafayette, Evansville, Greensburg, and Indianapolis participating.
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G.0.P.1S WORRIED OVER JACKSON’S KEYNOTE SPEECH Wonders if It Will Cost Him Klan Vote or Win AntiKlan. Republican leaders today, while expressing satisfaction at the general tender of the keynote speech of Ed Jackson, Republican candidate for Governor at Newcastle Saturday night, were somewhat non-plussed ai. his declaration on religious liberty. According to statements heard about G. O. P. headquarters, Jackson's declaration on State issues were all that was anticipated, a vigorous defense of the present Republican administration, but opinion is divided as to whether his declaration as to religious liberty would lose votes amang the Klan members or gain votes in the anti-Klan ranks. His Statement Jackson's statement was: “There is an attempt being made on the J part of some of opposition party to inject an issue in this campaign that has no place in politics. This can have no other purpose than to prejudice some of the voters, hoping thereby to gain votes for their party. The hope is that they may prejudice the Catholic, negro and j foreign voters that they may vote their prejudices rather than express their better judgment. “I am uncompromisingly in favor of the separation of church and State. I am unqualifiedly onposed tiny religious domination, either Protestant or Catholic, using its religious organization to secure control of our Government or any bra.nch thereof. “I am just as uncompromisingly in favor of religious liberty. Every individual has the right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience. This religious conscience may be expressed through whatever religious organization with which he or she may care to affiliate. This right is guaranteed by the Constitution of our country and must be kept inviolate.” Issue Evaded Opinions expressed by some political leaders were that Jackson evaded the issue, in that religion is not the issue, but “invisible” government as against government by the people is the question, since the Klan has entered politics. Jackson spoke on conservation, capital ami labor an,l defended the republican budget law. Thousands greeted Jackson at Newcastle in the staged meeting with a torch light parade, bands and fife and drum corps. State Chairman Clyde A. TV alb introduced all State candidates ifrom the platform. Msr. Catherine Bou cher. Valparaiso, preceded Jackson with a talk on national issues. Jackson was heckled throughout his sjieech. it was said here today, by the question: “Are you a Klansman?" Jackson ignored the heckler. R. L. CORBIN IS BURIED Services for Former Railroad Official Are Held at Joan of Arc Church. Funeral services for Robert L. j Corbin, 42, former assistant superintendent Michigan Electric Railway, j Kalamazoo, Mich., who died Thurs- ( day at home of his brother, William | Corbin, 219 Koehne St., was held at 1 9 a. m. today at Joan of Arc Church. ! Burial in Holy Cross Cemetery. He had been In poor health and j canie here to live with his brother. A j daughter, Clara Mae, 12, survives, j Boy, Ift, Missing Week Police have found no trace of Wil- j liam Davis, 10, who left, his home j at 115 W. Twenty-Second St., last Monday, while his mothes, Mrs. Charlotte Davis, was away. He was carrying a suit case, and was wearing a brown suit, hat and overcoat.
A Puzzle a Day
Though secure and in his cage, The parrot, when , will fly into a rage. Three words are missing in the verse; each word is spelled with the same six letters, differently arranged in each case. Can you supply the missing words? Answer to previous puzzle:
*1 V fe
When the numbers at the points of tlie star are arranged as above, any two numbers that are side by side will add up to the same total as the two numbers opposite. (Nine and 5 equal 10 and 4; 7 and 1 equal 6 and 2, etc.). Other arrangements are possible. Three Youths Arrested Wilbur Allen, 18, of 2018 Newton Ave., Claude Priest, 17, of 2131 E. Washington St., and Carl Smith, 15, of 308 S. Sherman Dr., are held on charges of vehicle taking. Detectives Klaibcr and Sullivan allege they took an auto owned by Claude E. Case, 1615 E. Market St. They were arrested in the car at Brownstown, Ind., and returned here.
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ESCAPED MEN SOUGHT Tipton Officials Ask Local Police to Watch for Two Youths. Claude Loucks, police chief at Tipton, Ind., notified local police today that Howard Murray and S. B.
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Register Now Better Home Lighting - Contest Open to school children over ten years old. Ask Your Teacher She will give you announcement folder explaining details. Thousands of Dollars in Prizes Contest Opents Oct. 1 Electrical Development Association of Indianapolis 58 West New York Street. Lincoln 4232.
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October Ist Will Be Pay Day for Our Savings Depositors We will be ready Wednesday, October Ist, to pay thousands of dollars in interest to our savings depositors at the rate of—--4V2% Per Annum We sincerely hope you are on this pay roll. If not, start right now. Do You Know — That $1 or more, will start an account here ? Remember This — We will allow interest from the FIRST on all deposits made on or before the TENTH. .If your name is not on our interest “pay roll” you are missing something. Open a Savings Account NOW. MEYER-KISER BANK 128 East Washington Street Hours I 8 A* M - to 5 P- ML Daily ) 8 A. M. to 8 P. ML Saturday
MONDAY, SEPT. 29,1924
Fouch, escaped from the jail ther<= Saturday night. Murray, who live! in Elwood, is very slender. Fouch/ has red hair and ruddy complexion/ Both are thought to be in an auto owned by •Clifford Washington of Tipton. \
