Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 241, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1926 — Page 5
FEB. 8, 1920
FARMERS SUM TARIFF BOARD Senator Shipstead to Ask Commission Be Abolished. Ttme9 ,BM WASHINGTON, Feb. B.—A reso ution abolishing the Tariff Com mission and asking an investigation ~f what it has done, will be de manded In the next few days by senator Shipstead of Minnesota, at lie request of the National Board of Kurm Organizations. The farmers are “off” the Tariff ■ 'ommission because of the way buter and casein Investigations were handled last year. Danish butter it cheap prices has been flooding he American markets, according to •airy farmers. It has meant serious osses to a State like Minnesota, ■vhere the butter industry has crown bv leaps and bounds the las. >w years. All these things were nought out at the hearings before lie commission last summer. , Subsequent to the open hearings, i.e farmers charge, the commission held secret hearings with Danish • epresentatives and then delayed dieir decision on the question of an nci-ease in the tariff from 8 cents to "1 cents a pound. EXTENSION TERM OPENS i no Enrolled for Second Semester at I, U. Center. • \uproximaiely 90*) students were .oiled for the second semester of lana University extension courses ■ ich opened today, according to In- * napolis center officials. Sixty-five •ernoon and evening classes in i lous subjects are offered. The extension division faculty will onsist of twenty-two instructors Tom the university at Bloomington. Liberal Arts courses are in charge f Mary B.- Orvis and /the business otirses are under Franll H. StreightrC. CHARGE BILL UNPAID Allen Chadwick, 19. of 841 Park we., is held today on charges of agrancy and petit larceny and three ompanions are charged with • agrancy. Police say they failed to ay for ten gallons of jjgsohne they btained at a Standard Oil filling sta'.on at Southeastern Ave. and Washigton St., early Sunday.
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STABBING AT RICHMOND Man Held in Jail Pending Outcome of Victim’s Condition. Bu United /'ri* _ . „ , . RICHMOND, lnd„ Feb. B.—Jake Heilard is in jail here today awaiting the outcome of the condition of Grover Williams, whom he Is alleged to have attacked with a knife. Heilard, a former roomer at the Williams home, ts said to have attacked Williams when he was ordered off the place. Williams’ condition la serious
DEMOCRATS TO WAR ON SMALL Volstead Repeal Also Sought by Illinois Party. Hu United Press CHICAGO, Feb. B.—Ousting of -Governor Len Small and modifl cation or repeal of the Volstead act are the principal planks In the platform adopted by the Cook County Democratic convention for the AjrT prim a The Democrats. In convention Sunday evening, declared Small has no right to continue in office 'n view of the findln of the courts, that the G< vernor owed the State more than 51.000,000. This sum represents Interest on State fu.ds Small is alleged to have withheld from the treasury while he was the State treasurer. The Volstead act has failed, the convention held. The resolution for modification or repeal said: “The lesson of history has taught us that morality can not be established by law. “Our current experience is convincing us that an ill-advised law, the operation of which conflicts with human rights, can be provocative of nation-wide contempt for law; also for a breakdown of moral standards so threatening in its sinister influence upon our civilization that every thoughtful American, every father and mother must regard it with grave alarm.”
DATS CANCER IS HEREDITARY Experiments With 50,000 Mice Made by Woman. Hu Unffisl Press „ , . CHICAGO, Feb. B.—After sixteen years of study and experimentation, during which she used fifty thousand mice, Prof. Maude Slye of the University of Chicago Is convinced that cancer is hereditary, and that it is not a germ disease. The disease is not contagious, her experiments show. Professor Slye started her experiments in 1910 wilth two mice. She grafted a tit of tumorous growth into the bodies of the mice and found that the offspring Inherited the disease. In an effort to prove her theory that the disease Is not germ origin, Professor Slye many times has placed perfectly healthy mice In the same cages, with the diseased ones. Instead of contracting the disease by propinquity, the mice remained healthy, she said. This, she said, proves that cancer is not a germ disease.
FIRE IN APARTMENTS Night Blaze in Butcher Shop Below Disturbs Occupants. Occupants of the Maar Apartments were disturbed Sunday night when a fire broka out in the butcher shop of O. L. Ivranz, 1708 S. East St., below the apartments. Firemen said they believed Wage was started by mice chewing matches. Damage was given as $250. The family of William Davis, Negro, '2702 Shriver Ave., was forced from their home when fire started from sparks. Loss was estimated at $1,500.
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Tells Why He Would Take McCray’s Place in Prison
Uii VHA Service POULAN, Ga., Feb. B.—“We are all prisoners to life—confined to earth until paroled by death.” From his de luxe hermitage, where he hibernates In winter like the wild things of the , ir~ - mounting hills BS •jv around him Chase S. Osborne, once gMCt ; Governor of Michlj gan, thus voiced SP?]|3jjftE the ph 11 o s ophy which led him to Aft;. - \ ap pea .1 to the f*.r Cray. ex-Governor The wo r 1 d-at-large may have mai-veled at this offer to serve inother’s ten-year term In jail, but Osborne the people of southwest Georgia do not wonder. Each winter for many years “the hermit of Possum Poke" has come with the first frosts of fall to hiber-
POLICE ARREST 24 MOTORISTS Seventeen Drivers Face Charges of Speeding. Twenty-four auto drivers were ar* rested by police over the week-end. Seventeen of the number were charged with speeding. The alleged fast drivers were: WII-* flam Thiele, 24, of 144 N. Arsenal Ave., also held on a charge of driving while Intoxicated; Fred Spencer, 30, of 2344 N. Meridian St.; Morris Walker, 20, of 2805 E. Washington St.; John Betts. 19, of 914 Harlan St.; Ralph Huey, 28, of 808 N. Tuxedo St.: Harley Pendergrast, 30, of 2011 Brookside Ave.; Paul Gray. 19, of 11 E. Thirty-Eighth St.; Sam Fletcher 19, of 5693 Central Ave.; Thomas Robinson. 18, of 3539 College Ave.; Ralph Carr, 23, of 244 S. La Salle St.; Joe Boldt, 33. of 1105 S. State Ave.; Eugene Essellborn, 18, of 526 Chadwick St.; Ray Humes, 34, of 1602 Harlan St.; Joe Johnson. 28, of 838 N. Capitol Ave.: James Boyd, 30, of 5160 Park Ave.; Paul Christ!, 24, of 1402 W. Ray St„ and R. E. Punkett. 31, Rochester, Ind. George Schultz, 36, of 352 W. Twenty-Eljfhth St., Is held on charges of driving while Intoxicated and failure to stop after an accident, while Bert Foust, 47, of 977 W. Pearl St., In charged with driving while intoxicated.
BANDITS KILL VICTIM Fatally Wound Richmond Motonnan in Hold-Up. Bu United Press RICHMOND. Ind., Feb. B.—Police today attempted to trail two bagdlts wanted for the killing of William Landis, 43, street car rtiotorman. Landis was fatally wounded hy one of the bandits in a hold up when he reached for a revolver instead of obeying an order to hold up his hands. Although it Is believed he’ partially recognized one of the bandits, he died without giving any clew to aid in the search for them. Police believe his silence during the time he lay wounded In the hospital was caused by fear of impll eating some Innocent person in the deed. REV. SWEENEY BURIED Hu United Press ' COLUMBUS, Ind., Feb. Columbus today suspended business activity for the funeral of Rev. Z. T. Sweeney, prominent Christian minister and former consul general at Constantinople, who died In an Indianapolis hospital*
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
nate In his hill cabin, like the wild things in the hills has gone int the taught their Bible townfolk.tnlked.it their eh i, sprean y! altruism through B township and c!t> time, he settled a great fortune up- McCray on his former wife when they parted. The State of Michigan would have him as a senatorial candidate, but he was through with politico. The routine of life and the ruts that most men follow were behind him forever. In the winter he appeared at his Georgia cabin; In the summer he appeared >' an island cabin in Canada. He arises two hours before daybreak. He is in bed at dusk. He works hard about his place. He does hia_pwn washing and his chamberwork. In a measure he has achb ->dom. He goes upon geological expeditions. He studies the botanical specimens in the hill country. He writes and he reads a gread deal. His philosophies are as much Buddhistic as they are Christian. His personal attitude on prison was not that of the world-at-large. Convicts, he feels, have greater freedom than many people. "Really there is no such thing as liberty,” he holds. ' "Thousands are more restricted by their circumstance and communities. Working classes move from hovel to Workshop. In tenement districts conditions of Imprisonment are worse than at the State Prison. In our own cases we are the jailers Fur thermore a study of prison codltions from the inside would be Interesting to me. “I feel It is practical to remove MeCrhy and put me In bis place. It is a defeat of justice to keep him whe*-e he will die.”
DEATH IS INVESTIGATED One Held After Body Found In Canal Is Identified. Max Lasley, Negro, 950 W. Twen-ty-Sixth St., is held today on a vagrancy charge while Detectives Sneed and Trabue are investigating the death of Clarence Hayes, 35, Negro. 361 W. Twenty-Fifth St., whose body was found in the canal Saturday at Blackford St. Hayea' body was identified Saturday by his wife, who said he had been missing from home since Dec. 4. According to police, a fight occurred at Lasley’s former home at 1320 Fayette St.. Dec. 15. and when police raided the house the partiel pants ran from the back door. It was said then that someone had fallen into the canal, which Is in the rear of the house, but no evidence of a drowning was found, FAIRCHILD TO ASYLUM Hu United Press HUNTINGTON, Ind., Feb. B. Charles Fairchild, found not guilty last week of the murder of Andrew Strouse, today was to be taken to the hospital for the criminal insane at the State Prsion at Michigan City. COCK FIGHTING HALTED Hu United Press RICHMOND, Ind., Feb. B.—An effort to revive cock fighting in Wayne County came to a sudden and disastrous end. Five men are in Jail today charged with promoting a fight.
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CONSIDER BALL SENATE TIMBER G. 0. P. Seeks Opponent to James E. Watson. Frank C. Ball, M uncle millionaire fruit Jar manufacturer, is considered as a candidate lo make the Senate race against Senator James E. Watson. anti-Watson leaders said today. Doubtful whether former Senator Albert J. Beveridge will enter the contest, the G. O". P. faction leaders are surveying the field for candidates. Ball was considered by Governor Jackson to succeed the late Senator Samuel M. Ralston. Forces against Watson are looking for a candidate who will appeal to the farmer-labor vote. The question Is raised whether Ball, an employer of thousands of men, would satisfy this body of voters. Former Mayor Lew Shank of Indianapolis and Walter Bossert, former Indiaria Klan grand also are being considered.
193 ARE TAKEN OVER WEEK-END Twenty-One Blind Tiger Arrests Made by Police. Police raids over the week-end -resulted in the arresting of 174 men and 19 women. Charges varied from vagrancy to manslaughter. Forty men and one woman were charged with public intoxication. Twenty-one arrests were made on blind tiger charges. Amounts ranging from a half pin to two gallons of liquor were seized by the officers. Those charged with operating blind tigers were: Vassell Thomas, 40, of 737 N. Haugh St.; James Rector. 23. of 25 W. Michigan St.; William Taylor, 29, Negro, 634 Roanoke St.; Irvin Pope, 28. of 821% S. Illinois St.: Dine Dumcoff, 35, of 928 N. Warman Ave.; Willie Kirk, 29, Negro, 1108 E. Thirteenth St.; John Tuggle, 28, 'Negro, 1330 Yandes St.; William Strlekler, 27, of 19 E. St. Joseph St.: Edward Cavanaugh. 31, of 117% N. Illinois St.; William L. Oarringer 28. of R. R. C. Box 140; P. E. Carroll, 25, Louisville, Ky.; Minnie Johnson. 43, Negro, 325'Louisiana St.: Viola Bass. 22, Negro, 613 W. Vermont St.: Ray Redmond. 24, of 2319 N. Kenwood Ave.; Elmer Drake, 53, Heights; Edgar Coffman, 26, 557 W. Washington St., Paul Washburn. 26, 1066 Udell St.: Charles Bailey, 50, Negro, 1209 Lafayette St.; George Allen, 24, 903 \ <rginia Ave.; Bessie Tate, 30, Negro, arii Mary Bailey. 48. Negro, both of 12 0 Lafayette St.
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BODY TO BE RETURNED Bu United Press ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. B.—Word
\j J throng the streets oi quaint old New clhnax —• J J all that is conventional Absorb the Carnival spirit. Witness the magnificent pageants. Make the trip to New The Finest Train in the World Lv. Chicago 12:30 midday. Arrive New Orleans 11:15; Gulfport 11:30 next morning—where immediate connections made same station—special service for Biloxi. Arrive 12:25 p. m. and Pass Christian arrive 12:45 p. m. Convenient v connections at Mattoon and Effingham.
Mid-WinterTour Mardi Gras Eighth Mid-Wi utr Mardi Gras Vacation Party to New Orleans direct or via the beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast as Su wish, leaves Mattoon and Jingham.Saturday.Feb. 13; returning leaves New Orleans, Wednesday, Feb. 17. Cost from Mattoon to New Orleans and return $51.65; from Effingham $80.21. Aik for circular giving full details. Mardi Grae Festival at Biloxi. on the Beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast, Feb. 10.
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I aX sn3~r o ' 1 ( I V t-*&£.l S\l * T tv les! ,rS,^lo?’ I X • I \p^^oof^ s I I PLAHI Jr \ Still in Effect. M I
was received here today that the body of Leon Eyoke, 28. former Anderson man, will be returned here
t. o/hnerica’s Greatest oAnnual Carnival Join the rollicking, jostling, good-natured crowd of masked revelers... the clowns and harlequins... the caballeros and Spanish dancers... the ghosts and red devils—who will throng the streets of quaint old New Orleans at the climax of Mardi Gras week... ending February 16th. Forget for a while all that is conventional Absorb the Carnival spirit. Witness the magnificent pageants. Make the trip to New Orleans part of the Holiday. Go via the JkmmaMnited The Finest Train in the World Lv. Chicago 12:30 midday. Arrive New Orleans 11:15; Gulfport 11:30 next morning—where immediate connections made same station—special service for Biloxi. Arrive 12:25 p. m. and Pass Christian arrive 12:45 p. m. Convenient connections at Mattoon and Effingham. Fastest to these destinations hy 6 % to 10% hours. All-Pullman, all-steel. Obeervation-library car, bufiet car, compartment — single or en suite —drawing room and open-section Pullman*; through Pullman* to Gullport, serving Biloxi and Pass Christian. Unrivaled dining tervice. Valet, maid, barber, shower bath. Telephone, market report* and late telegraphic news bulletins. Three other fast trains daily, Chicago to New Orleans, leave 1201 a. m., 9<oo a. m. and 6:15 P- m. Special reduced rate Mardi Gras round trip ticket, good on all trains, from Indianapolis $46.65. On sale February Bth to 14th, inclusive. For reservations, circular giving full details, and booklets descriptive of New and the Beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast, phone or unrite any Illinois Central Representative. For fares and reservations, ask * w Koriasr. District Foeionger Agent Illinois Central Railroad J> “• 31* Jkerohairta Bank Snildlhg. 18. Meridian MS. konSs Lincoln 4314-4*lo, Indianapolis, lad. •00-11
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for funeral servxlces. Eyoke died in Los Angeles, Cal., from injuries received in an auto accident.
