Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1925 — Page 7
TUESDAY, JUNE 9, T3ZO.
ANGLO-FRENCH PEACE PACT TO CURB GERMANY 4 Acceptance of Agreement Will Prevent Aggressive Moves East or West. Bit United Press PARIS, June 9.—Germany will be prevented from making any aggressive moves to the east or west If she accepts the security pact as agreed upon by England and France. The joint reply to Germany’s proffers of a pact will undoubtedly be sent this week to Wilhelmstrasse and will contain provisions designed to make the Rhine border really secure. There are two new stipulations. First: France will guarantee the execution of any arbitration decision, resulting from the proposed arbitration treaties among Germany, Poland and Czeoho-Slovakia, should the decision be disregarded. Second: England will guarantee similarly the execution of the treaties between Germany and France and between Germany and Belgium, affecting the western frontier of Germany. RECORD JUSTICE METED Toutli Passes Check, Sent to Reformatory in Hour and Half. Bu Times ' Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., June 9. Justice was meted out here in record time. LatJ Monday afternoon Lowell S. Baker, 18, passed a .bad check for $3 at a grocery. An hour later he was arrested. Arraigned immediately before Judge Fred E. Hines, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to one to five years at the Indiana State Reformatory and fined SIOO. / Half an hour later he was on his way to the reformatory. FIGHT”TO SAVE "SHOPS to Lose 800 Men if Railroad leaves. r United■ Press LOGANSPORT. Tnd., June 9. Business men cf Logansport today started a fight to retain the heavy repair shops of the Pennsylvania Railroad here. A committee Os six men was in Philadelphia in an effort to secure withdrawal of the order for abandonment of the shops. More than 800 men will be thrown out of work if the order is carried out. The Pennsylvania plans .to have the work now done here handled in Fc. Wayne and Columbus. GRINDER TAKES ARM Bu United- Press ANDERSON, Ind., June 9.—Phillip Schmidt, feeding meat into an automatic sausage grinder at the Hughes Curry Packing plant here, ran his hand into the machinrey and his arm was ground off to the elbow. 666 la a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It kills the erma.
!Easy Way \ To Keep 1 W estinghouse Jf A size for every purpose / Store Oprj 8 30 to 5:30 7 ' ) “THE DAYLIGHT CORNER**—INDIANAPOLIS
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New Board of Trade # Head Elected
rrum-hurst j&isey
Nominated on both tickets, election of Broaehurst Elsey of the Indianapolip Glove Company as president of the Indianapolis Board of Trade was a certainty at the annual meeting of the organization Monday. Other officers chosen were: Vice president, Linton A. Cox; treasurer, Tom Oddy; members of the governing board, Edgar H. Evans, J. Martin Antrim, Elmer W. Stout., Horace E. Kinney, E. H. Darrach, Otto P. Deluse, Fred C. Diakson, Edward D. Evans, Dr. James F. Taylor, Charles E. Hall and H. J. Berry. Re-election of William H. Howard, secretary for seventeen years, is expected.
We Don’t Change Much at That
JUDGE RAPS RAIDS WITHOUT WARRANTS
Police Can’t Search Those in Public Place, Court Rules. Police can not enter a public place, line the patrons up agair.st the wall, search them for lie uor or gun3, arrest them, without a warrant or Information, and get away with it. Special Criminal Judge Frank A. Symmes has riled. Judge Symmes Monday afternoon discharged Lawrence Cooper, ,1447 Montcalm St., who appealed after being fined SIOO and costs and given thirty days In jail by City Judge Delbert O. Wilmeth. Cooper was arrested Jan. 25, by Lieut. William Cox in a pool, room. Had Information “No. we didn’t have a warrant for Cooper, or any Information about his breaking the law,” said Cox. “We had information that men hanging around the poolroom were bootlegging out of there. So we lined all of them up against the wall and searched them. Cooper had half a pint of mule." "The law says, and it has been so for many years, that an officer can arrest a person whom he sees committing a misdemeanor, or who has committed a felony and the officer has been informed of it, or he must have a warrant," said Symmes. Many Chargee Cooper was charged with "selling, harterlng, exchanging, giving away, furnishing, disposing of, manufacturing and transporting intoxicating liquor; possessing a still: selling at retail; maintaining a common nuisance by allowing people to resort to a room, house, building, boat, structure. club and other places he maintained to let them drink liquor there,
the indiajn atolis times
and with unlawfully receiving liq lor from a common carrier." He was found guilty of all c*a rges in city court. “What he would have ’oeen charged with if the officers had found a pint of liquor on him I can only guess,” said Symmes. CROP DAMAGE ESTIMATED HIGH (Continued From Page 1) as the binders will not be able to handle It properly. Oats face the same conditions, he said. Al>out 20,000 acrt3 of oats in Indiana were killed by the frost, and mu< h of the acreage was planted in com as it was too late when the frost came to re-seed the oats. About a half-million acres of com in Indiana to be replanted because of the frost. The replanted corn is getting a poor start because of lack of rain, Justin said, but rains later may save It. Justin pointed out that the drought existed long before the frost came and that If there had been more moisture in the ground the frost would not have been so disastrous. Onions Radiy frosted Onions were badly frosted In the low places but the plants In the low places have recovered better than those on the higher fields because, the latter, while less Injured by frost, were retarded by the drought. "It is difficult to determine just what is drought damage and what is frost damage,” he said. This is true of the fruit crop, also. There is the annual “June drop" of fruits from the trees, the falling off of the small fruit, but It is hard to say whether the frost or the drought will cause the most to fall. About 60.000 acres of tomatoes were frozen out and a like acreage of potatoes. Where replantlngs were made, the growth has been greatly retarded by the drought, according to Justin. NO PROSPECT FOR RAIN But Temperature Will Bo Lower, Rays Weather Bureau. 'A gradual getting back to normalcy of temperature in Indianapolis and Indiana, with a continuation of drought, was forecast today by the United States Weather Bureau. Temperatures were about 3 degrees lower today than on Monday, but thei mark of 71 at 7 a. m. was still 6 degrees above normaml. "Indiana needs at least two Inches of rainfall spread over twenty-four or thirty-six hours, right away," said J. H. Armlngton, meteorologist of the Weather Bureau. TOMATO LOSS AVOIDED Plants Purchased in Georgia Given to Franklin Farmers. Bv Times Special FRANKLIN, Ind., June 9. —Eight million tomato plants from Georgia, purchased by canning companies here, have been distributed to farmers to replace vines blasted by the frost and heat. COOL BREEZES ASTIR Crop Damage Heavy—More Rain Is Needed. Bv United Press CHICAGO, June 9. Cooling breezes swept the Middle West today, with indications pointing to a further drop in temperatures tonight and tomorrow. The hot spell can not be said to be definitely broken, Director Cox of the Chicago forecast area said. St. Louis reported two death's due to the heat. The thermometer there hovers near the 90 mark. In Chicago the mercury stood at 78. St. Paul reported 50 degrees. The recent heat wave did damage
Window Shades Cleaned By Durham Will Be Well Done. Summer Prices Now in Effect Now is the time for the best service. Indiana’s Leading “Blind Men** R. W. DURHAM CO. RI ley 1133. 134 N. Alabama St. MA in 5829.
Manual Student Wins Honors
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Miss Olga Bonke
When special honors were awarded Monday night at Manual Training High School commencement exercises at Cadle Tabernacle. Miss Of,a Bonke, 2114 N. New Jersey St., was In the first rank. Besides winning a Holliday College scholarship. Miss Bonke was awarded the James Whitcomb Kiley medal for having the best scholarship of the two senior classes for the entire course. She was on the January senior honor roll.
estimated at tens of millions of dollars to growing crops. Heaviest damage is In Indiana, central Illinois and sections of Kansas, Nebraska and lowa. Unless rain falls soon the damage will be aggravated, field observers reported. may Tires are~many Result of Drought Shown In Report By Chief. The marked drought during May had an effect upon fires in Indian* apolls, it w’as shown by the report for the* month made by Chief John J. O'Brien to the board of safety today. A total of 811 alarms, eleven more than in 1924, were sent in. Fire damage in May this year was $38,976, and in May, 1924, damage was $32,136.26. WRECK TOLL IS TWELVE Two Others .May Die From Injuries at Converse. Bv I'nitcd Prett PERU, Ind., June 9.—Twelve men were killed and two others may die from Injuries sustained in the Chesapeake & Ohio freight wreck at Converse near here Monday when two car loads of coal were oerailed and rolled over on a crew of section employes. Five were injured in the accident, but three may recover. RELAY LEAGUE MEETING Second Hoosier Convention Will Be at Severin, July 10-11. Approximately 250 radio operators are expected to attend the second Hoosier American Radio Relay League convention to be held in Indianapolis, July 10-11, at the Severin. Plans were discussed Monday night. NEW AUTO FATAL Bu Timm Sprcial GOSHEN. Ind.. June 9.—Mrs. Martin Miller of Middlebury was nearly prostrated with grief today over the death oV her 1-year-old daughter. She lost control “of anew auto Monday and w.-ocked it. The baby was killed.
BURN WOODS TO NAB HIDING MAN Posses Seek Alleged Assailant of Women. Bv United Press GARY, Ind., June 9.—ln a final effort to locate the colored men who has been hiding in the wooded swamp and waste lands west of Gary for four days, posses today were burning over the region to drive him from his hiding place. The man, who has attacked four whtie women within the last two weeks, was seen again Monday by a group of persons at a filling station. He turned and disappeared in the swamps after two State Militiamen had followed and fired after him. POLICE TO HOLD AUCTION Accumulations of Past Year Will be Sold June 22. ’ Attention June brides and bridegrooms. The police auction will be held June 22, at 2 p. m. at police headquarters. Everything from a cedar chest to household furnishings a motorcyccle and auto tires which have accumulated at headquarters during the past year will be sold, according to Sergt. Samuel Rariden, police station custodian. FORD PROPERTY BURNS Fire Destroys SIOO,OOO In Lumber at Iron Mountain. % Bv United Press IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich.. June 9. —With fire departments from four cities on the scene, the fire which destroyed SIOO,OOO worth of cut timber at the Henry Ford plant near here, during the night, was under control shortly before noon. Origin of the blaze Is unknown. DEATH INVESTIGATED Deputy Coroner William A. Doeppers today was Investigating death of Martin Andreja. CO, of 712 N. Wartnan Ave., at city hospital late Monday. Relatives said he had been suffering with stomach trouble for some time.
Barrels Necessary for Bathers City officials operating the Municipal bathing beach at Twenty-Sixth St. and White River contemplate laying In a supply of barrels for the use of some of their unfortunate guests. | The second victim In three days. Gilbert Emsweller, 1241 Central Ave., told police that while he was in bathing Monday, someone stole his suit of clothes, valued at S2O, from the kcker room.
pj)?f LAKES OLEO 18c | New Potatoes - 5 ? 25c | IBRffOIVISg3Si[ BANANAS h fee 1 MILK §S|3 “25c 11 GINGER aLe^™^lsc INI I IT I I V NEW ERA BRAND 1 J L !■ I Assorted Flavors, 6 Or. Glass, | \J\s SANDWICH SPREAD iX.27c IIiIMUSTARD 10cM MATCHES • 6. 29c
Niece of Slayer Sees 8 Die
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Dorothy Russel] IJoyd Russell
Dorothy Russell, 10, of Hamilton, Ohio, escaped death by a freak of luck when her uncle, Lloyd Russell (below), suddenly crazed, killed her grandmother, her parents and five brothep and sisters. He aimed a pistol at her and pulled the trigger, but the cartridge failed to explode. He is under arrest.
IS ITCH EN Going On a Vacation? Can Alon^^^
STATE WARS ON LAW VIOLATORS Seeks to End Dynamiting of Fish. Conservation department officials announce reward of SIOO to any person furnishing the superintendent of fisheries and game with Information leading to the arrest and conviction of persona dynamiting fish. Complaints of fish being killed by dynamite and other explosives In several Hoosler streams have been numerous this spring and State officials are determined to abolish this unsportsmanlike practice as it cuts great inroads into the aquatic life of the State’s public waters. The fact that black boss and other species of game fish are nesting In the streams is leading some to spoar and net them. Wardens are instructed to watch carefully for this, form of violation, and also not to overlook persons who, In pretending to fish for rock bass and crapple, l takes a bass during the closed season. Open season on bass fishing starts June 16. CLUB HAS_ BIRTHDAY Woman’s Rotary Club observed Its sixth anniversary Monday evening with a banquet at the Claypool, followed by a program of special muslo and dancing. Covers for 100 were laid. With Dr. Jane M- Ketcham, retiring president, sat retiring and incoming officers. Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt Koehne, new president, played a group of harp solos, accompanied by her brother, Adolph H. Schellschmidt, cellist. Mrs. E. E. Flloklnger sang, and a group of Miss Helene Hlbben’s pupils gave Russian dances. Mrs. Louis Burckhardt will entertain members and friends of the club Saturday with a picnic at her home north of the city.
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