Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 266, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1926 — Page 1
Home Edition REVENUE Collector Thurman explains the new income tax law on The Times editorial page daily.
VOLUME 37 —NUMBER 266
dsborbooy LOOKS INTO SMUDGE fnvestlgatlon Committee Is Named at C. L. U. Meet-ing-Delay in Building Is Assailed by Different Speakers. PRESIDENT REGRETS HIS VOTE FOR KERN Definite Announcement That ©Protesters Will File Injunction Petition Made by Representatives of North Siders. With vigorous opposition to any delay in building the new Shortridge High School expressed at a Central Labor Union meeting Monday night, members of a special committee named by the union were to meet this afternoon to investigate the school board’s plan to locate the school on Forty-Sixth St., between Central Ave. and Washington Blvd. On the committee are Arthur Lyda.y, C. L. U. secretary, chairman; Louis Borth and W. Jackman of the Paper Hangers’ Union, John Smith, C. L. U. president, and Henry Friedman of the Retail Clerks’ Association. A report will be made to executives of the union at the next regular meeting, March 23. Question of whether to send a representative to the school board meeting tonight, and to the second protest meeting Wednesday night at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will be decided. Announcement that the protesters will file a petition for an injunction to restrain the board from selling the Thirty-Fourth St. site and buying the Forty-Sixth St. tract was definitely made today by members of the legal committee, representing •Orth side residents and school parons, who are protesting against the jßtocation of the school. Committee Divided Lyday. Friedman and Smith fa-oi-ed locating the school at ThirtyCourth St., during discussion at the abor meeting, while the other comnit tee members said they would prefer the Forty-Sixth St. location. ‘‘We would like to talk to School Commissioner Charles W. Kern because he knows the problems of organized labor,” Smith said In naming the investigation committee at the meeting. ‘‘This school should have been built four years ago,” Smith said. ‘‘Thirty-Fourth and Meridian is the (Turn to Page 15)
RINGS WORTH $2,100 STOLEN FROM HOME Missing Since Thursday, Owner Reports—Set With Sapphires and Diamonds —Other Thefts Investigated.
Mysterious theft of two diamond rings, mounted in platinum, valued at $2,100, was reported to police today by Joseph R. Raub, 3816 N. New Jersey St. Mrs. Raub placed them on a dresser in an upstairs room at
fLUB OPPOSES TRAFFIC CHANGE Plan Has No Advantage, Declares Official. Hoosier Motor Club will fight the proposal of Boynton H. Moore, city council president, to prohibit right and left turns in the downtown district bounded by Capitol Ave. and Alabama, Ohio and Georgia Sts., Todd Stoops, manager said today. Moore suggested the new ordinance to speed traffic in the business area. “Motor traffic, now terribly congested, will be forced to move rapidly or avoid the regulated district,” Moore said. Stoops said the plan had no advantage and would result in a “stream of traffic with no place to go.” Such a plan is not used even la Chicago, he said. “The motorist would be forced to . drive out of the zone and turn to get to the desired place,” Stoops declared. rOQJS “DAM'S
The Indianapolis Times COMPLETE WIRE SERVICE OF THE UNITED PRESS JUL WORLD’S GREATEST EVENING PRESS ASSOCIATION
normal: weather seen Predict Temperature Will Continue to Climb Wednesday. Temperature in Indianapolis will continue its slow climb toward normalcy today and Wednesday, according to the United States Weather Bureau. The mercury should register about 22 tonight, Meteorologist J. H. Armington said. The red in the thermometer stood at 17, or 14 degrees below normal, at 7 a. m. Monday morning the low mark was 10. Increasing cloudiness was predicted. MINER GOES TO JAIL State Supreme Court Upholds Contempt Conviction. Bu United Press CHARLESTON, W. Va., March 9. —Van A. Bittner, chief oraginzer of the United Mine Workers o< America, must serve six months in the Monongalia County jail for contempt under a ruling announced by the State Supreme Court today. Bittner was convicted in Monogalia County on a charge of contempt as the result of his organization activities in the northern West Virginia fields last summer. He had appealed.
PEKIN BOTTLED IN VIOLATION OF BOXER PACT Armed Forts Halt Ships— Diplomatic Corps to Protest. B PEKIN, *March 9.—Pekin today is cut off from mail and freight communication with the outside world. The isolation results from the battle around the Taku forts, near Tien Tsin, where Kuominehen troops and a force representing the coalition of Marshal Chang Tso Lin, Wu Pei Fu and Li Ching Lin are hotly engaged. Marshal Feng Yu Hsiang, Kuominchen commander, who controls the Pekin area, boldly defied the Boxer proctocol by notifying pilots that no vessels would be permitted to pass the forts, thus closing the last outside mail and freight connections with Pekin and Tien Tsin. The forts fired on pilot vessels before notifying the pilots of the new order. The diplomatic corps is expected to protest against the isolation of of the forts, both of which are contrary to the Boxer pi-otocol, which made it the*duty of the Chinese government to maintain permanent connections between Pekin and the sea, Within the city the ptlitical situation is chaotic, There virtually is no cabinet. Two newly appointed ministers have refused to serve. North of Taku the coalition forces are reported to have effected a landing and to be engaged in fighting which already has cost many casualties. HOURLY TEMPERATURE 6 a. m 17 10 a. m 30 7 a, m 17 lj. a. m 34 8 a. m 22 123 (noon) .... 36 9 a. m 26 1 p m 40
their home last Thursday, he reported. No strangers have visited the home to his knowledge, Raub said. One ring was set with eight diamonds and four sapphires and the other Was a one and one-fourth karat diamond. Detectives were assigned to the case as the theft swelled the gem robberies since March 1 to nearly a dozen. On that dale F. J. Steckelemeier, 4349 Guilford Ave., reported thieves had taken his wifes rings worth $1,200. She remembered removing them from her finger after a party. Furnace ashes were sifted and other extensive search was made without results. The same day H. E. Adams, 303 W. Ohio St., reported the disappearance of a S7OO diamond ring. Detectives Shubert and Tooley discovered he was excited when he made the report. They recovered the gem from a nail on which he had hung it absent-mindedly.
WOMEN MAKE FINE PASTORS Feeminine Persuasion Is Key to Success. BV United Press SANTA ROSA, Cal., March 9. Feminine persuasion as a substitute for masculine logic and eloquence in the pulpit has proved highly successful, according to reports on four women pastors of Sonoma county to the Methodist Church Conference here. In each of the rural churches where the women pastors preside the members voted for return of the feminine leaders to the pulpit for another year’s pastorate. The women are Miss Charlotte Miss Charlotte Jones, Forestville, Guerneville and Cazadero; Miss Bertha B. Balderee, Occidental, Freestone and Bodega; Miss Clarice Myers, Windsor.
BRIAND TO TRY CRISIS TASKAGAIN Adopts French President Invitation to Form New Government Notifies League to Continue Conversations. GENEVA POLITICIANS ENCOURAGED BY NEWS Believe, However, Little Progress Will Be Made Until Veteran Personally Returns to Conference as Conciliatory. BV United Press GENEVA, March 9.—Prospects for the untanglement of the unhappy League of Nations from the mixture of claims and threats which threaten to disrupt it, heightened to day with the news from Paris that Aristide Briand had accepted President Doumergue’s invitation to form anew French Government. Briand notified Lpuis Loucher of the French delegation here to resume efforts to reach a solution of the League problems without awaiting his i-eturn. The conversations were immediately x-esumed but it is believed that they will progress but little without Briand's personal appearance at the conference table in the role of conciliatory. If Briand succeeds at Paris, politicians expect him to apply his great
powers of concilia- ■ tion here. No other Frenchman, probably, could have been chosen with such I prestige as Briand holds. He took I part in the preliminary negotiations for the present sessions. His resignation early Saturday when I the French chamber of deputies voted down his sales tax proposal came as a thunderbolt. Meanwhile, pend-
Briand
ing Briand’s attempt to solve the crisis in his own country, the League council and assembly abandoned their sessions today. Delegates launched an effort to effect a private agreement on tho conflicting claims of Germany, Poland, Spain and Brazil to permanent council membership. The plan was on the basis of immediate election of Germany to the council and the subsequent election of Spain and Brazil. The elections of Spain and Brazil would become effective upon the (Turn to Page 2)
STATE AUDITOR IN UNIQUE ROLE Official Fights Three-Sided Legal Battle. State Auditor L. S. Bowman today was in the unique position of a defender of himself on two sides and an aggressor in the meantime. Bowman was defendant in suits, brought by Dr. James G. Royse for back pay as assistant secretary of State board of health and Charles O’Malley, Gary, to clear the title on 5.7 acres of meandered land sold recently by the State. Bowman was pressing a suit in Terre Haute for collection of gasoline tax owed by the Powers Oil Company, now out of business. Bowman w r as able to remain in his office, conducting his threesided legal battle through representatives or the State legal department.
Irate Wife Pulls Woman’s Hair
r ~~~1 REAL hair pulling, womanIA I to-woman battle took place in MM the corridor of the courthouse, outside the treasurer’s office, late Monday, with Mrs. Bertha Zener, 1824 N. New Jersey St., the irate wife of Politician John Zener, the victor. The vanquished lady battler, a courthouse employe, whom Mrs. Zener blames for the recent Zener domestic split, was rescued by men who came running at the unusual sounds, and “It’s a good thing they toot off her. I just couldn’t stop, i was so excited,” said Mrs. Zener. In Judge Frank J. Lahr's court, a few minutes before, Mrs. Zener was awarded $lO a week for the support of her two children and John Zener was ordered to pay oft the mortgage on the little frame home where the Zeners have been living. “When I came out of court, I couldn’t restrain myself another min-
INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1926—16 PAGES
Detention Home Described as Fire-Trap Reporter Finds Conditions Worse Than in Some Jails.
By Eldora Field Shades of Oliver Twist and his poor farm! If any Indianapolis citizen wants to step into a scene that might be taken from the pages of a Dickens novel, with unfortunate children housed in a ramshakle, old-residence Institution, with broken plaster, bumpy, knarled floors, dark rooms, with windows flats against the brick of an adjoining building, let him visit the Detention Home 1102 N. Capitol Ave. County Commissioner Cassius L. Hogle declared today that the Detention Home is a fire trap. He will propose anew one to the county council. Juvenile authorities established the Detention Home as a place where wayward children, or those guilty of nothing blit being deserted by heartless parents, might be held until permanent disposition of their cases. The idea was to relieve children of the stigma of being in jail. Most jails are better, so far as physical conditions are concerned, than the Detention home. Disgrace, Says Hogle "That place is a disgrace,” said Hogle. I agree with him. The north side of the house, only eighteen inches fromthc high brick wall of the Lexington apartment house has no one blight or livable room init. The assembly room and the dining room are on this side and "we have to eat every meal by artificial light" the assistant superintendent explained. Outside, the sun was shining brightly. In this dining room an ancient two-bulb light fixture was on at broad noon. Gloom, Gloom, Gloom The assembly room is as gloomy as twenty by thirty feet of space would be in which there is only a single window. But the rooms that really clutches at your heart are the “sitting rooms”—God pity the poor unfortunates that have no place else to sit—of the boys and girls on the second floor. Going through a hall, where the floor has sunk perceptibly to one side, up creaking bumpy ancient wood stairs, the visitor reaches first the girls’ sitting room. Here seven or eight girls were sewing in a room twelve by sixteen feet. Stained brown paper patched broken, old plaster. Water pipes were in plain view. One plain kitchen table and plain kitchen chairs were the furniture. Absolutely nothing of interest on beauty, except some scraggly looking valentines pinned on the wall. Worse Place Found This was bad enough, but the dormitory was worse. Two connecting rooms—small room with eighteen cots very close together and a sum total of three windows, two of them against that Inevitable brick wall! One closet serves all the girls. The bathroom off the girls’ sitting room was without windows and was tiny. The boys’ sitting room is the most pitiful of all, for here the boys have made an attempt at decoration. Two horses’ heads cut from magazines, a pencilled drawing of an automobile and a magazine cut of President Coolidge adorn the walls. In another boys’ room, there is an attempt at a dado decoration and black and white pictures from newspaper supplement, go clear around the room. “No, people wouldn’t believe that things were this poor and inadequate,” remarked Miss Susanna Pray, the superintendent. The laundry, manned by six girls this week, has two shallow basement windows. There is no drying room and “we have to hang clothes around over the registers upstairs this cold weather,” the superintendent said. LOCAL ORPHANAGE AID Noblesville Couple Wills Lutheran Home SIB,OOO. Bu Times Special NOBLESVILLE. Ind., March 9. The joint will of Charles and Susan Barth, filed for probate here, gives their entire estate valued at SIB,OOO to the Lutheran Orphans Home at 3310 Washington St., Indianapolis.
ute,” said Mrs. Zener. “For two nights, I've lain awake planning this. The woman I attacked has been going with my husband for over a year. Dozens of people have told me of seeing them together. “I sent a colored man inside for her, slipped off my coat and when she came out the door I went up to her. She’s a much larger woman than I, but I wouldn’t have hesitated at an army. " ‘You’re the creature that has taken away my husband,’ I said to her and then I don’t know just what happened. I just know I had a good grip on her hair, and I pounded her with all my might. I’m ashamed to have to do this, but as an old lady said who came up to me afterward, ‘lf wives would take such things‘as this in their own hands, there would be fewer vamps.’ ” Mrs. Zener’s hand was almost dislocated, in the battle but she seemed happy. “It lias taken me twenty years to get up the courage I now have," she asserted “and I’ll confess that I’m
TEN BODIES TAKEN FH l VA. MINE Believe Nineteen Other Men Trapped in Shaft by Explosion Are Also Dead — Rescuers Break Through Debris. FORTY MEN RESCUED ALIVE; WILL RECOVER New Toll Taken Where 181 Miners Lost Lives by Blast in 1914—Relatives' Gather at Mouth of Pit —Forced Back by Guards. BU United Press ECCLES, W. Va.. March 9—All the miners entombed in shaft number 5 of the Crab Orchard Improvement Company are believed dead. Ten bodies have been found in shaft No. 5 and one man rescued with forty others from shaft No. 2, died last night. Veteran miners and State police then pointed out that there is practically no chance that the men remaining In the shaft are alive. They are variously numbered as nineteen and twenty. , Os the thirty-eight men rescued several were suffering from effects of gas. It Is believed all will recover. The last two to be rescued were behind a pile of debris patiently awaiting aid. An explosion on the same shafts in April, 1914, killed 181 miners. Many women and children, stricken with grief, spent the night at the mine. Those families which had been more fortunate brought food to the mothers keeping the long vigil.
ARMS PARLEY SQUABBLE NOW Britain, France Ignore Soviet Ultimatum. Hu United Press GENEVA. March 9. —Great Britain and France have agreed tentatively that the League of Nations preliminary disarmament conference shall convene at Geneva May 15. The preliminary conference will meet April 13 if the tentatively schedule is adhered to. This agreement to convene the two conferences at Geneva rejects Soviet Foreign Minister George Tchitcherin’s ultimatum that Russian delegates would not participate in either conference unless it were held outside Switzerland. Strong opposition immediately developed to the Franco-British plans. Finland. Poland, Czecho-Slo-vakia, Roumania and Bulgaria insist that the conferences will be futile unless held outside of Switzerland. These nations are convinced that Soviet Russia otherwise will not participate. ROUND-UP CONTINUES Sheriff Expects to Arrest All Indicted Miners Today. Bu United Press EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 9. The round-up of the eighty-seven men charged in grand jury Indictments with complicity in the mine riots which occurred here recently continued today. Fifteen men were arrested on bench warrants yesterday and Sheriff Spradley of Warrick County, where the indictments were returned hopes to have all of the men under arrest by tonight. All of the men arrested were released on bonds.
glorying in taking my own part.” After the battle in the courthouse, Mrs. Zener went to police station and offered to give herself up, but the police refused to arrest her unless her victim swears out a warrant. “If they do arrest me, it was worth it,” said Mrs. Zener. In the meantime steps were taken by J. Stephen Fullen, an abstractor, and O. C. Harris, deputy county treasurer, to have their names erased from the freeholder’* certificate they signed when Zener obtained a permit to carry a revolver March 3 from Albert H. -Losche, county clerk. Fullen is an abstractor. Both Losche and Prosecutor William H. Remy were perplexed how the men could be removed unless Zener canceled his permit. The law does not provide for revoking a permit unless a person is convicted of a felony. Fullen said he and Harris wish to be removed from obligation because of the Zener domestic trouble.
Principals in Dry League Fight
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Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliotn (above) whose letter to Anti-Saloon Leasue trustees threatening action against the league because of a report of Superintendent Edward S. Shumaker (below) criticising Gilliom’s office is to be answered by the t r us tees. PAVING STAND PRAISED Contractors’ Association I-ands Position of Works Board. Indiana Highway Constructors, Inc., an association of contractors, have praised the recent stand of the board of works for honest paving. A letter to members, signed by William Holland, executive secretary, declared: “As an organization It is our purpose to stabilize the industry and to establish the responsibility of the contractor, either or both of which will tend to insure quality work. Skill, integrity and responsibility characterize the objects of our organization, and we, therefore, heartily indorse the proposition of the board of works.” BRIDGE BID IS LOW Figure for State ltd. Structure Below Engineer's Estimate. Low bid on the State highway commission s new overhead bridge near Scottsburg—separating State Rd. 1 from tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad, the Interstate Traction and a paralleling steam —fell more than $23,000 under the engineers’ estimate, a tabulation today showed. The Hutchinson Construction Company, Indianapolis bid low with an offer of $105,884.36. The cost was estimated at $129,774.99. The bid was $177,682.19. The bridge will be 470 feet long. The two railroads and the commission will share in the expense. THRASHING IS FAVORED Judge Slakes Recommendation During Trial of Youth. "I think a thrashing would be a good thing for this boy," Municipal Judge Dan V. White told Edward L. Henry, 862 Fletcher Ave., father of Raymond Henry, 18, on trial today charged with intoxication and operating a blind tiger. “I feel bad about the condition In this city where young boys and girls get liquor and -go out to these dance halls and drink it,” the court commented. Young Henry was arrested by Deputy Sheriffs Brown and Ragan at a barbecue place Feb. 27. Judge White discharged Henry on the blind tiger charge and took the intoxication charge under advisement. HEARINGS FOR VETS Legion Plans Cooperation With Disabled Ex-Service Men. In its efTort to bring every disabled veteran of the World War into contact with the United States Veterans Bureau, The American Legion in Indiana has entered into anew phase of cooperation with Veterans Bureau officials. A plan has been worked out whereby representatives of the Bureau at In dianapolis will conduct hearings on the claims of disabled ex-service men at district Legion conferences over the State. The first hearings under this new arrangement were held recently at a Ninth District American Legion conference it Lebanon and were conducted by John Ale, director of the United States Veterans Bureau at Indianapolis; Dr. Melville Ross, Veterans Bureau physician, and A. N. Cummings of the Bureau. Similar hearings are being arranged in connection with American Legion gatherings in practically every district in the State and it is believed that hundreds of disabled veterans will have hearings during the next few months.
Entered as Second-class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis. Published Dally Except Sunday.
ANIISALOON LEAGUE BODY WU RERIH TO Gun’S OENOONCMTOFREPORT Three Members of Headquarters Committee Start Drawing Up Rejoinder to Attorney General’s Statement on Criticism of Court. ACTION FOLLOWS RECEIPT OF LETTER SENT TO TRUSTEES Asked to Take Responsibility for Document Superintendent Shumaker Attends Conference Answer Is Expected Soon. Three members of the headquarters committee of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League this afternoon started drawing np a rejoinder to Attorney General Arthur L. Giiliom’a denouncement of the annual report of League Superintendent Edward S. Shumaker criticising the State Supreme Court.
Writing the reply followed receipt of a second letter to league trustees from Giiliom asking tVem whether they accept responsibility for statements contained in the report. The letter asked them to reply by next Monday. Following the executive session meeting of the headquarters committee it was announced by the Rev. W. B. Farmer, chairman, that the reply would be mailed Gilllom “in a short time, maybe tomorrow.” Some committee members were said to be determined to challenge Gilliom’s threat “to protect the dignity of the court” with a statement supporting assertions in the report made by Shumaker. The superintendent met with the committee, delaying until late this afternoon starting to Washington, D. C., where he will attend the league national executive committee quarterly meeting. Eight Member* The headquarters committee, rep. resenting between annual meetings, the League's fifty-four trustees, is composed of eight members. The ninth regularly appointed member,
CHILD , 3, AT PLAY IS BURNED ON IRON Quick Action Believed to Have Saved Sight of Mary Helen Whitaker—Doctor Rushes to Home.
Luck, skillful driving and quick action saved the eye of Mary Helen, 3, daughter of Tracy W. Whitaker, accountant in the city controller's office. "Mary Helen ran into the hot iron and burned her eye," was the message Whitaker received over the telephone from his wife at 4708 Broadway. Whitaker called to former Councilman Otto Ray, who was in the of-
RACE PROBLEM TOBETALKED Ministers Will Meet With City Lawmakers. Twenty-four representative white and Negro clergymen wljl meet with Mayor Duvall and city council members at 2 p. m. Friday, to discuss the housing problem of the two races, Councilman Otis E. Bartholomew announced today. Bartholomew Is chairman of the council’s public welfare committee now considering an ordinance to prevent persons of one race from living in districts inhabited chiefly by those of another race. Ministers invited to participate in the conference are: Morris Feuerlicht, Frederick E. Taylor, Harry A. King, Gerald Smith, A. S. Buchanan, Frederick Leet, Francis Gavisk, Floyd Van Keuren, J. D. Matthius, J. Ambrose Dunkel, Ernest M. Evans, O. A. Trinkle. J. M. Nobes, E. A. White, C. L. Griffith, Frank S. C. Wicks, A. T. Clark, B. F. Farrell, B. L. Herod, W. D. Shannon, S. B. Bitler, W D. Speight, R. L. Pope and R. J. Westbrooks. WETS AND DRYS CLASH BV United Press WASHINGTON, March Wets and drys staged a turbulent debate in the Senate today over propaganda issued by both sides. Senator Bruce, Maryland, wet Democrat, read results of newspaper polls showing an overwhelming majority for light wines and beer. Senator Willis, Republican, Ohjo, retorted he had tons of dry propaganda in his disk and would unload it Into the record uless wets stopped their practioe of putting newspaper atorleo into tho reoorC.
Forecast INCREASING cloudiness tonight and "Wednesday; slightly warmer tonight, with lowest temperature about 22.
TWO CENTS
Bishop H. H. Fout of Indiana poll* Is in the Holy Land. Committeemen are: The Rev. D. M. Horner, Cicero; the Rev. M. 11. Appleby, Brazil, and the Rev. C. M. Dlnsmore, the Rev. Ernest N. Evans, the Rev. 11. B. Ilostetter, E. T. Albertson, tho Rev. C. H. Winders and the Rev. W. B. Farmer, chairman, all of Indianapolis. All but Dinsmore attended. Farmer, Appleby and Winders were writing the reply. Report by Trustees The report which Giiliom termed false in a letter to each of the trustees. it was pointed out, wag drafted, printed and distributed “by order of trustees," as it purported on the cover. Giiliom took the view it was Shumaker’s personal report. It being their report, several of the trustees, It was said, were anxious to refute Gilliom’s tirade. Trustees standing behind Shumaker in sacs of Gllliom's denouncement are planning a testimonial banquet In his honor March 16. Leading drys of the Nation will speak. Shumaker is the oldest league superintendent, in point of service, in the country.
flee, and they ran to Ray'a automobile. Otto stepped on her to the office of Dr. C. V. Rutherford, 408 Pennway building. Fortunately, Dr. Rutherford had just dismissed a patient and wax able to Jump Into the car. Speeding to the Whitaker home, Ray broke the legal limit consistently to the Broadway address. There Dr. Rutherford was able to administer early treatment and bandage the eye. Dr. Rutherford said he believed the eyesight would be saved. Wh 1* the mother waa Ironing, Mary Helen waa playing ahout and ran into the iron, Mrs. Whitaker said. macTeady flight off Poor Weather Conditions Prevent Record Attempt. R United Press M'COOK FIELD, DAYTON, Ohio, March 9.—Due to atmospheric conditions and low visibility, Lieut. John T. Macready this afternoon postpone hla proposed flight to recapture the world's altitude record.
FLAPPER FANNY says £ a ♦Es | | | #'— ev wts mmetas. dtc. ,
Some folks who are too tired to do anything else fall ir love l
