Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 217, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1926 — Page 2

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WEEK-END GUN PLAY WOUNDS ONE;JKILLS ONE Murder Toll for Year Mounts to Three —Police Seek Shooters. On® Negro is dead today and another is suffering from a bullet wound in his abdomen, as the result of gun play early Sunday. Killing of tho Negro brought the murder toll to three for the year. Aaron Jordon. 23, Negro, of 736 Drake St., was fatally.wounded early Sunday, following an ulleged drinking bout at tho homo of Mr. and Mrs. Franlt Brown. Negroes, 1213 Oregon St. Llgut. Ralph Dean and squad were told that Jordon, his brother, Moffett; Russell Moore, 1213 Oregon St.; Levy Henderson, 004 W. Twelfth St., and Buddie Dodson, 1234 N. Missouri St., and Browns were at the Browns’ home when Dodson started to leave and issued nn invitation for Mrs. Brown to visit him. “Two moons will come together when she does,” Aaron Jordon Is alleged to have said. Jordon and his brother and Dodson left the house and shortly afterward shots were heard and Aaron Jordon was found dead. Moffett, Jordon and f)uddie Dodson are sought. All the witnesses and participants, who are Negroes, were slated on . vagrancy charges. Willie Lynn, Negro, 347 W. Twenty-Fifth St., was slated for carrying a gun and vagrancy, when found at Dodson's house with a loaded revolver. Carl Crane, 28, Negro, 1522 Laurel St., was shot in the abdomen when he attempted to stop a fight between Richard Fowler, 1506 Laurel St., and Ruben Davis, 1927 Columbia Ave., Negroes, while at a party at the home of Bertha Smith, Negro, "Witnesses, who said the shooting was accidental, told Lieut. Ralph Dean and squad that Fowler had

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a rifle and revolver while he was quarreling with Davis, who wanted to take Miss Smith out riding. tVhen Crane interfered he was shot. Dam el la Edwards, 1622 Laurel St.; Davis, Miss Smith, Moses Blackmore, 1927 Columbia Ave., and Oneeta Lockridge, 1927 Columbia Ave., all Negroes, were siated on vagrancy charges, while police are searching for Fowler,

HOOSIERS GET MILLIONS BACK

(Continued From Page 1)

P. Van Camp,Hampton Court, $4,269; International Steel and Iron Company, Evansville, $29,676; MaasNeimyer Lumber Company, $1,445' Vtwinegut Hardware Company, $2,-57-2; Washington Bank and Trust Company, $2,929. Gas Company Included People's Coal and Cement Company, $1,231; Indiana National Bank, $505; Spacke Tool and Machinery Company. $6,498; Rink’s Cloak House, $1,617; Frank Prox Company, Terre Haute, $1,099; Citizens’ Gas Company, $4,810; Metropolitan School of Music, $268; Indiana Truck Corporation, Marion, $14,014; Diamond Chain and Manufacturing Company, $11,225; O. L. Huey, Woodruff Place, $844; Indiana Bell Telephone Company, $4,624; W. E. I' Hithcock, administrator estate of A. L. Johnson, Muncle, $8,979; Eclipse Mercantile Company, 225 N. Delaware St., $778; H. R. Davis, 11 Woodruff Place, $107.97. Mrs. K. L. Hall, 1307 Fletcher Trust Bldg., $321; National City Bank, $23,257; Bankers’ Investment Company, Lemcke Annex, $1,162; George Hitz Company, $5,702; W. F. Moore, 1327 E. Washington St., $2,471; J. W. Fudge, 2333 N. Pennsylvania St., $135; A. H. Smith, 58 N. Audubon Rd., $2,471; Albert Johann & Sons 'Company, 113 Garfield Ave., $2,972; Vonnegut Hardware Company, 120 E. Washington St., $1,938; Rockwood Manufacturing Company, $2,761. Will H. Hays, Sullivan, Ind., $3,490; Evans Milling Company, care of J. E. Hughes, attorney, First National Bank Bldg., Chicagd, $27,786; Indianapolis Athletic Association, $2,391; Indianapolis Drop Forging Works, $9,527; estate of Cortland Van Camp,- $7,495; Columbian Enamelling and Stamping Company, Terre Haute, $49,492; State Hotel Company, 250 S. Illinois St., $896; The Gibson Company, Indianapolis, $4,799; Hercules Buggy Company, care of Baker & Baker, attorneys, Washington, D. C., $11,270. Bee Hive Paper Box Company, 621 S. Delaware St., $1,174; Ell Lilly Company, $13,476; Indianapolis Street Railway Company, $4,664; Bankers and Merchants Consolidated Theater Company, $2,384; Frank F. Fox, 4311 N. Meridian St., $10,006; Havens and Geddes Company, $21,891; Indianapolis Abattoir Company, $1,759; | Louis O. Deschler Company, $1,228; | Banner Furniture Company, Muncle, ! $20,527;' Hoffman Bros., Ft. Wayne, $16,156; C. E. Miller, Anderson, $16.155; Arthur Jordan, 924 Lemcke Bldg., $5,012. Utility Is Recipient Indiana Trust Company, executor estate of James Proctor, $3,941; Vonnegut Hardware Cos., Indianapolis, $7,525; Wabash Cabinet Cc npany, Wabash, $9,381; Northern Gas and Electric Company, Hammond, $8,331; G. H. Westing Company, $510; Enquirer Printing and Publishing Company, $618; Terre Haute Malleable and Manufacturing Company, $8,872. Wellsmere Denison Corporation, $387; Eureka Block Cool Company, Teryo Haute, $10,754; White Restau- ! rant Company, $3,842; Baker Shook Company, $7,815; Jabez Woolley, 708 j Riverside Dr., Evansville, $7,531. People’s Coal and Cement Company, $1,231; Indiana National Bank, $505; Spacke Tool and Machinery Company, $6,498; Rink’s Cloak House, Indianapolis, $1,617. Hook Drug Company, 10 N. New Jersey St„ $2,037; Indianapolis Se- | curities Company, $4,706; H. F. Roempke, 1631 Prospect St., $459; Crawford Fairbanks, 416 S. Sixth St., Terre Haute, $1,604; L. D. Beuenting, 522 State Life Bldg., $841; Wainwright Engineering Corporation, McQuay-Norris Company of Indiana, successor, CoAnersville, $13,641. Peerless Dry Cleaners and Dyers, 3210 E. Tenth St., $2,097; V. E. Bolyard, 2539 Broadway, $135; Apperson Brothers’ Auto Company, Kokomo, $9,657; Durant Motor Company, Muncie, $1,666; Frank Prox, Company, Terre Haute, $9,098; estate of Henry Severin, $100; Board \of Trade Billiards Company, Board of Trade Bldg., $587; Bedford Stone and Construction Company, $1,484; L. Chester Loughry, 401 State Ave., $539; W. H. Nadlg Grain Company, Shelbyville, $7,372; S. B. Ilosmer, 15 Downey Ave., $412.

DRAW FOR VACATIONS Today was vacation lottery day at police headquarters. , Starting with the captain at 2 p. m., policemen and policewomen drew from a hat slips giving dates of their fifteen day vacations for this year. The first set of vacations will begin .Tan. If.

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<< ""T| A M A!” resounded M squeakily In the vicinity JL2J of the Public Library Saturday afternoon. Half a hundred young “mothers” arrived for a doll party, bringing their offspring with them. Baby dolls with a mechanical 'vocabulary of one word predominated, but there was one 60-year-old doll present. She was A former playmate of Daniel Boone’s granddaughter, and surveyed the assembled flapper dolls with unblinking chinablue disapproval. A pair of twin dolls In pink blanaets attracted much attention. Miss Zella Spence and Miss Carrie E. Scott of the library staff told stories about dolls.

Far and Near

at " n LOODY Williamson CounIR I ty " * ost * ta title. Only I , ten murders occured in 1925, Coroner Bell at Marion, IIL, reported today. He said the county, once the hotbed of Klan, anti-Klan and miner faction fights, has reformed. W. K. Hale, king of the Ossage Hills, faces two murder charges, returned by the Federal grand jury at tGuthrle, Okla., which is investigating mysterious deaths of a number of wealthy Indiana. Only twice as many married women are now employed in manufacturing and mechanical industries as there were ten years ago, Miss Mary Anderson, chief of the United States Women’s Burea at Washington, announced. Oberammergau’s peasant players next will present their passion play in the summer of 1927, instead of 1930, as originally planned. A fund to enable Evelyn Nesbit, recoveting at Chicago from self-ad-ministered poison, to enable her to open a night club at Atlantic City is being collected by friends. The Navy's first submarine mother ship, the 17. S. S. Holland, will be launched at Puget Sound Navy Yard, Fob. 19. At least eight persons were drowned off the Jersey Coast in a storm which swept up from the south, Friday night and Saturday. Two coal laden barges were sunk. GIANT THUG IS SOUGHT Hu .re Bandtl Ten orizing Marion— Holds Up Pedestrians. Bu r nlted Prett MARION, Ind., Jon. 11.—Police today are searching for the “giant thug” who has been terrorizing the citizens of Marion for the last few days. Several hold-ups, in which the unmasked bandit, described as being more than 6 feet tall and weighing over 200 pounds, relieved pedestrians of considerable money have been reported. •

BURNS PROVE FATAL Coroner Investigates Death of Francis Burdin® in Barn. Coroner Paul F. Robinson today investigated death of Francis Burdine, 54, Negro, living in a barn owned by John White at 432 W. Sixteenth Pl„ who was fatally burned late Sunday. The born caught fire following a coal oil stove explosion. Firemen said they believed Burdine, who had only one leg, was asleep at the time. MINISTER ELOPES Bv United Prett * MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Jan. U Rev. Stanley W, Graf, 24, Chicago congregatlonalist, and his bride, who was Mrs. Elizabeth Mathews Richardson, 34, are honeymooning here after eloping from the Chicago settlement house where Mrs. Richardson presided as resident superintendent and the pastor as chaplain.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

LOCAL CARS AT BIG AUTO SHOW Marmon and Stutz Models Attract Wide Attention. Bu Timet Special NEW YORK, Jan. 11.—Many Indianapolls automobile and accessory dealers and Marmon and Stutz officials took a prominent part In the twenty-sixth annual auto show which opened here today. The two Indianapolis made cars attracted wide attention at Grand Central Palace. F. E. Moscovlcs, Stutz president, and G. M. Williams, Marmon president, headed large sales delegations. National Automobile Chamber of Commerce sponsored the exhibit. Dealers from all over the United States are placing orders for new models. E. W. Steinhart. Hoosier State Automooilp Association president .attended. Appointment of D. G. Roos, widely known engineer, as chief engineer of the Marmon Company, was announced. He formerly was vice president and chief engineer of Locomobile and was associated with a number of other concerns.

MORE THAN BILLION FOR ROADS IN 1926

Huge Sum Forecast as More Than 35,000 Gather for Highway Cohference at Chicago.

Bu United Prett CHICAGO, Jan. 11.—A billion and a quarter will be spent for hard surfaced roads In 1926, William H. Connel, president. American Road Builders’ Association, said today as the association’s annual conference opened here with an expected attendance of 35,000, including Canadian and South American delegates. Connel stated this country now had 123,000 miles of hard surfaced roads, 180,000 miles of improved roads and 2,000,000 miles on which Uttle or no work has. been done. “Improvement of these roads,” he said, “will not only relieve the dangerously and destructively crowded arterial highways, but, by spreading out our system of goods roads, will cause a more equal determination of wealth.” Plan for a highway connecting Ontrlo with Colombia, South Americp., will be discussed in addition to a highway linking all the large cities In America. Delegates* will urge bill boards

Cobwebs Bad Luck for Jack

Jack Ellis, alls Leslie Bills, 1* not as lucky as the Robert Brace of yore, who freed Scotland through a lesson he learned by watching a spider and it’s web. Ellis w r as arrested early Sunday by Sergeant Warren Mo Clure when he alighted from a train wfih his clothes covered with cobwebs. Police had received a warning from Greencastle, Indiana, officers to watch for a man whose clothes were covered with webs. The man, it was said, crawled through a basement in a Greencastle store and knocked the combination^ from a safe. Ellis is held as a fugitive.

THE SCENIC ROUTE /|ffr Daily train through the^Picturesque Through Sleepers Indianapolis luW'T •to Jacksonville \ir *_ J Observation-Club Car, sleeping cars, dining car / l E3 and coaches. V/ J —> l * Lv. Indianapolis 10:00 p. m. daily *JO ~ The ideal way to travel to Florida. Convenient daily connections at Jacksonville W/J'/V ~T JW (in same station) with trains to Florida aL^ East and West Coasts and Central Lake Via Cincinnati and L. &. N. R. R. For Tickets Apply to Loesl Agents, or \ (jj) Address J. C. Mlllspaugh. Dlv. Pass. Agent \ j 110 Kahn Bldg., Indianapolis 1 Pennsylvania Railroad

NINETY-EIGHT ARE TAKEN IN POLICE URIVE Week-End Clean-up Brings Nearly 100 Arrests. Clean-up squads, composed of dis trlct sergeants and patrolmen and new automobiles squads established by Police Chief Claude F. Johnson, made ninety-eight arrests over the week end. A drop was noted in the number of week end intoxicated persons charged, only fifteen men and one woman being slatod for this offense. Blind tiger operators were hard hit and seventeen men and two women were slated as Illicit liquor owners. Many were carrying half pints. Gambling Charged Edward Brown, 33, Negro, 227 W. New York St., the New Era Republican Club, was charged with keeping a gambling house. Three men were charged with gambling and four women with vagrancy. William Standriff, 26, Negro, poolroom proprietor, 624 H Indiana Ave., was charged with running a game in which twelve negroes were playing. William Clayton, 39, Nego, of 833 W. Eleventh St, was conducting a “gallopin’ domino” game it was said and he and six men were charged. Miss Ella Baxter, 25. Negress, 919 Colton St., was keeping a game, police said, and three men were charged with gaming. Blind Tiger Raid The largest number of arrests in a blind tiger raid reslulted when police raided the home of Thomas Farmer, 40, Negro, 2023 E. TwentySeventh St. Eight men and two women were slated on vagrancy charges. Lieut. Fred Winkler and squad raided the Senate Hotel, Market St. and Senate Ave., and charged Miss Catherine Cox, 34, proprietress, with keeping a resort, and two men and two women with statutory offensss. In the raids seven men and one woman, wanted on felony charges, were found.

and other obstructions at cross roads be removed, that curves be banked and pedestrians be request ad to keep to the left side of the road in an effort to cut the death toll — 14,000 last year. BANQUeTfOR EMPLOYES Capital Loan Company Entertains Guests at Dinner. Employes, of. the. Capitol. Loan Company were entertained Saturday evening at a banquet at the Columbia Club followed by a theater party at Keiths. L. L. Bishop, manager and W. R. Teel spoke. Covers were laid for Messrs and Mesdames W. R. Teel, L. L. Bishop, Robert Tappan, Rt B. Money, Paul Stub'ism. Paul Wolf, Austin' Terrell, Rol>ert Richardson, Mrs. Ruth White, and Miss Martha Dierking. ‘SHORT cur IS FATAL Bu Timet Special . VALPARAISO, Ind", Jan. 11.—A short cut today had cost the life of Helen Glover, 17. She and two other' companions drove an auto across frozen Flint Lake near here to save time. The auto -crashed through the Ice and Misj Glover was drowned.

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Motorists, Beware! Stickers Here POTORISTS beware. The stickers are here. This was the warning of Inspector of Traffic Walter S. White today. Persons who park by fire plugs, park overtime, or in alleys and safety zones, fail to have tail lights, or double-park can expect to find a pink tag fastened to their car when they return, he said. White said he had so arranged his force of seventy traffic men that downtown streets will be patrolled all hours of the day. Last week the department was without stickers. Fifty thousand were ordered.

NATIONAL DRY INQUIRUSKED Congressional Request Made by Flying Squadron. Complete investigation of the facts, enforcement, effects and re> suits of prohibition is asked of Congress in a resolution adopted at the annual meeting of the Flying Squadron Foundation here today. Oliver W. Stewart, president, telegraphed congratulations to Lincoln C. Andrews, assistant secretary of the treasury, on achievements in enforcing prohibition. Support was pledged. The resolution asked House and Senate Committees to summon witnesses and require presentation of books and papers, calling for Information from official sources. “The time has come to ascertain the facts by such method and in such manner as will place them beyond dispute,” the resolution said.

NO THREAT INTENDED United States Will Not Break With Mexico. Bu Timet Special WASHINGTON. Jhi* 11.—Mexico’s reply to this Government’s note regarding the latest development in the long-standing oil land controversy is awaited as an event of much importance in the relations between the two governments. While the United States is determined to resist anything it deems Inimical to American interests, it is authoritatively learned thi'e Government does not, mean to Intimate that withdrawal of diplomatic r& l&tious is Imminent. GIRL IS LOVE PRISONER Stays Five Months In Boy’s Room Before Discovered. Bu United Prett -> LOWELL, Mass., Jan 11.—Gertrude McClusky, 18, “love prisoner” for 160 days, was the bride of Raymond Barnes, 18, today. Tho couple weer married when police discovered that Miss McClusky, missing since last August, had been living in Barnes* room nearly five months without the knowledge of his parents. Bam as said he carried food to the girl himself. CHARGES TO BE FACED Oaktown Men in Jail After Barricade Against Law. Bu United Prett VINCENNES, Tod., Jan. 11.— Formal chargee of resisting in officer were expec ed to be filed today against Roy Codfelder, Oaktown miller, and his father. The two barricaded themselves In their mill and for twenty-four hours stood off sheriff’s deputies attempting to serve a replevin writ. They capitu.ated after a squad of Vincennes policemen armed with riot guns surrounded the mill. Though angleworms cannot dlstlngulsh objects, they are not blind.

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TWENTY-FIVE MOTORISTS IN NET OF LAW Twenty Week-End Arrests on Charges of Speeding. In spite of snow covered streets, twenty-five motorists, twenty charged with speeding, were arrested by police over the week-end. Those charged with speeding; August Kruge, 36. of 369 S. Butler Ave.; Jess® Morgan, 25, of 703 Greer St.; Carl Skeen, 20, of 19V4 Wallace St.; Andrew Hawkins, 36, of 318 N. Missouri St.; George i-Gessell, 25, of 3246 Graceiand Ave.; Logan Harden, 36, of 1335 Madison Ave.. Herbert Pasch, 19, of 263 lowa St.; Fred Baker, 25, of 108 E. Thirteenth St.; George Skaggs, 26, of R. R. A. Box 636; J. C. Byrne, 34, of R. R. F. Box 85; Edward Miller, 24, of 922 Hovey St.; John Furz, 31, of 322 N. Rural St..; Winifred Monica!, 24, of 26 N. Drexel St.; Ralph Brand, 31, of 1924 N. Bellefontairo St.. Jake St. John, 33, of Greenfield; Henry Smith, 33, Negro, 1808 Martlndale Ave.; Thomas N. White, 33, of 6024 E. New York St.; Fred Relfchert, 55, of 6127 E. Washington St.; Ray Miller, 30. of 1706 Ingram St Harvey WaJnscott, 37, of 617 S. Tibbs Ave., was charged with speeding, resisting an officer, reckless driving and failure to have proper license and title. Charles W. Foster, 29, of 69 S. Bolton St.„ is held on a charge of passing a street car while unloading passengers. C. O. Lane, 55, of 819 E. Norwood St., and Henry Pontz, 42, of 4054 Park Ave., were charged with driv ing while Intoxicated. Nelson J. Irwin, 25, of Frankfort, Ind., was charged with falling to stop after an accident and assault and battery. Hugh F. Bannen, 32, of 909 E. Forty-Eiflhth St., was charged with driving while intoxicated. Police say

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two railroad crowing watchmen •'harged he dfova hi* auto into a safety gate at Southeastern Ave. and Oriental St. Bannen denied he had been drinking and said the snow caused tho accident. PARISH HAS ELECTION New Officer* Are Announced by, Christ Episcopal Recfor. Dr . Floyd Van Kuren, Christ Episcopal Church rector, announced flection of new officers at the annual parish meeting. Officers: Senior warden, Chsries ffl. Judnon: junior warden, Arthur D. Pratt, Vestrymen. D. W. Allenlloo. D P. Bead* W. V, Drlhrook. W. W. Knight, Frederic Krull, Martin KulUukh. Delegates to the Diocesan Conned] see: Martin Ilehfuse, Charles K. Judson. Arthur n Pratt, Frederic Krull Alternate# are: W. V. Bo* el I, W. W Knight, W. W. Del brook, and D. P. Beach. Delegates el retort at the annual meeting to represent tho Parish In the House of Church Women are: Mrs. W I) Pratt, Mrs. Frank W. Lewis. Altemalos Mrs A. E. WilSan and Mrs. Frederic Krull, Delegates to the House of Church Women from the organisations are: The Woman's Auxiliary Mrs. J. P. Morrison; tho Woman's Guild, Mrs. Martin KehJuiw. the Church School. Mrs. T. H. Komstohlc. Immediately after tho parish meeting tho vestry held ft meeting tor organ'ration at which Judson was elected treasurer and H. H. Ounkle. clerk.

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