Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 279, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
WJJER SUBSIDY OF SCHOOLS BY STATE FAVORED Governor Studies Report Compiled by Rural Education Group. Wider subsidy of public schools by the State is urged in a report compiled by the Indiana rural education committee during the last year, being studied by Governor Jackson. To extend the public financial aid of schools the recommendation is made that a State income tax be created by constitutional amendment and its proceeds be diverted to education. Appointment of a legislative committe is urged of Jackson in order that a comprehensive school program may be submitted to the 1927 Genreal Assembly. The committee centered its attention on means of equalizing the educational advan tages of country school children with those of the city. Recommendations Some of the committee’s outstanding recommendations: 1. Diversion of the State inheritance tax to the common school fund. 2. Consolidation of the Congressional township school fund and the common school fund. 3. Reduction of administrative costs of township schools. 4. Rapid consolidation of rural township schools. 5. Uniform school tax rates within each county. 6. Elimination of township trustee’s school duties. 7. State rotating fund for poorer schools. 8. Publicly supported endowment funds for schools. 9. Steps to attract more competent to rural schools. 10. More adequate supervision of rural school teachers. Year Spent in Survey - Exactly one year was spent by the committee in its survey. The fourteen persons serving on the committee are George W. Freeman, Kokomo, chairman; Thurman A. Gottschalk, Berne; Claude Steele, Knox; C. P. Erni, New Albany; Charles Appleton, Camden; Walter Farmer, Franklin; E. L. Field, New Carlisle; Charles A. Greathouse. Indianapolis;' Merle Coons, Crawfordsville: Z. M. Smith, Greenfield; Mrs. G. G. Derbyshire, Southport; Mrs. B. B. White, Terre Haute; H. L. Smith, Bloomington; G. E. Roberts, Lafayette; W. P. Dearing. Oakland City, and Otis Crane, Marion.
GOLDMAN STORE LEASES SPACE Will Expand on N. Pennsylvania After May 1. Expansion of the Julian Goldman Union Store, 118 N. Pennsylvania St., is being planned today, following lease Tuesday for seven years of an additional ten feet of frontage. The store, located in the Vajen Block, will have a frontage of forty feet on Pennsylvania St. Alterations to be made after May 1, will cost more than $30,000. Total rental covered by the new lease is $161,000. The Goldman Company now operates fifty-seven stores in thirty-five States, ten of them in Indiana. Other Indiana stores are located at Evansville, Goshen, Elkhart, South Bend, Ft. Wayne, Terre Haute, Kokomo, Gary and Hammond. WOMAN IS HUNTED Police at Urbana, Ohio, today asked police here to notify Mrs. Sam or Emma Spencer of the death of John Bowkers, a relative.
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FRENCH CRISIS HOLDS INTEREST OF EUROPE NOW England Settles Hers, but Briand Faces Defeat — Franc Crashes. By Clifford L. Day United Press Statt Corrtsvondent LONDON. March 24.—With the governments of Great Britain and Germany overwhelmingly sustained by their respective parliaments on their actions at the recent League of Nations meeting at Geneva, the interest of Europe turns today to Paris, where Premier Briand seems on the verge of being voted out of office for the ninth time. The French franc today set anew record for depreciation on the local bourse, where 139% francs could be bought for one pound sterling. The franc closed yesterday at 138.8. Belgian currency was sympathetically weak at 121%, compared with yesterday’s close of 120%. French financial difficulties, menacing as they are to the rehabilitation of Europe, have not altogether eclipsed the acute problem of Locarno and the League of Nations. Today’s London papers, except the Daily Mail, are hostile to Sir Austen Chamberlain, the foreign secretary, and suspicious of his lengthy -explanation in the House of Commons yesterday. The 325-to-136 vote which defeated Lloyd George's motion of censure last night is generally described as 'a party victory, a hollow triumph.”
COOLIDGE HOME TO STAY OPEN Housekeeper to Carry Out President’s Wishes. Bit l nited Tress PLYMOUTH, Vt., March 24. Alone in the little farmhouse on which the spotlight of the nation recently was focused, Miss Aurora Pierce, faithful housekeeper for the late Col. John C. Coolidge, is preparing to carry out the'wish of the President of the United States. With the Colonel gone and no member of the Coolidge family to live on in the old home, Miss Pierce was asked to remain as caretaker, and, although she at first told friends she intended to leave Plymouth and ’ make her home with relatives in another town, she now has decided to continue to live on the Coolidge homestead. Her decision to make her home in the house she has lived in and cared for for more than twenty years is taken to mean that the President wishes to have the place kept in readiness at all times for him to come to when his memories turn to his childhood days, and the Vermont Hills. Close friends of the Coolidges feel certain he will make the homestead the summer White House for several weeks this summer. Tlie Coolidge farm, which has been in the family several generations, is to be tilled by Linn Cady, 4 a resident of Plymouth, who leased the place shortly before Colonel Coolidge’s death.
KINCADE CASE DELAYED AGAIN Two Important Witnesses Are Touring World. Bit Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind„ March 24. —Because tw r o important witnesses are now touring the world, the third trial of Lee Kincade, charged with murdering his father, wealthy farmer, has been postponed until May. It was to have opened Tuesday. Ivincade was convicted of manslaughter here and was granted a new triaj at Tipton. The jury disagreed in the second trial. COLDER WEATHER - DUE Rain Expected Here Tonight, Say U. S. Bureau Officials. Colder weather, with rain, is due to descend upon Indianapolis tonight, the United States weather bureau announced today. Temperature should be about 36 degrees tonight and the thermometer may go slightly lower Thursday, it was said. Cloudy skies are on the bill for Thursday. The city has enjoyed balmy, spring weather during the past two days. Temperature was 47," or 8 above normal, at 7 a. m.
Property owners near the 2000 block on W. Ohio St. today planned to petition for street improvements, to enable the milk man to make his daily delivery. Roland Estridge, truck driver for the East End Milk Company, 1016 Kealing Ave., Tuesday was delayed three hours between Traub and Elder Aves., a distance of one block, because of deep mud holes in*the street. The truck had to be pulled out. Paving stops near Elder Avenue. Mrs. O. B. Pulliam. 131 N. Traub Ave., said residents had complained to city officials about the condition, but were unable to get aid. ”Our car has been kept in the garage for weeks and weeks because we have no outlet to Washington St., said Mrs. Pulliam.
‘Old Glory’ Bus to Take Hiner on Campaign Singing, Dancing and Calliope Also Will Aid Senatorial Aspirant.
When Ward B. Hiner, candidate for the Republican short term senatorial nomination, arrives in a community on his State speaking tour, there’ll be nothing shrinking about the appearance. Hiner will arrive in the largest bus in the State, thirty-seven feet long, painted red, white and blue. Ilis speeches will be made from the rear platform and will be preceded by a novel singing and dancing program by three Negro boys. An additional musical feature will be a leather-lunged circus calliope. Inside the bus a radio will gamer messages from over the country. Cost of the equipage will be about $20,000, according to Hiner. The candidate will take to the i road ijext week.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Henry J. Itolity, 2603 College Ave., Ford, 5537, from Twenty-Eighth St. and Central Ave. Fred Wallman, 1249 Wright St., Ford, 513-468, from Pennsylvania snd Louisiana Sts. 11. .B. Sliger, 1120 X. Pennsylvania St., Jford, 545-826, from rear of 1120 N. Pennsylvania St. Charles W. Smith, 3330 Osage St., Fold, 547-802, from 300 W. Vermont St. John S. Knapp, R. R. B. Box 128-P, Chevrolet, from Pennsylvania and Maryland Sts. Harley Brown, 936,. West St., Ford, from Washington St, and Capitol Ave. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: For droadster, engine number 9045482, found at Brookville Rd. and New Y’ork St. Robert Wavey, 557 WT Morris St., Ford, found near that address. HOSPITAL INMATE KILLED Bn Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 23. Mrs. Veronica Shydock, 46, Terre Haute, was killed late Tuesday w-hen she wandered from the Southern Indiana Hospital for the Insane, where she was an inmate, into the path of an inter-urban.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HEARTATTACK IS FATAL TO A. W. THOMSON Prominent Broker Dies at Brother’s Home —Rites Here Thursday. Financial circles today mourned the death of Alex W. Thomson, 67, senior partner of the brokerage firm of Thomson & McKinnon, 300 Fletcher American Bank Bldg, who died following a heart attack Tuesday at the home of his brother, Henry CThomson, 3456 Central Ave. Mr. Thomson had been ill since January. Funeral services, to be attended by members of the family and business associates, will be held at the broth er's home. Thursday at 3p. m. The body will be taken to Winton, Ohio, Friday, for burial. Indianapolis Stock Exchange adopted resolutions of regret over Mr. Thomson's death. Flowers were sent relatives. Mr* Thomson had been in the grain and later general brokerage business since 1878. In 1911 be became a member of the New York Stock Exchange and was said to have been the first member residing in Indiana. He was a member of the New York Cotton Exchange since 1909. The firm of Thomson & McKinnon, brokers, was established in 1913 when Mr. Thomson formed a partnership with R. W. McKinnon, S. F. White of Chicago and T. .1. Brosnahan of New York. Later Henry Holt became a resident partner of Mr. Thomson and partnerships were formed with 11. L. Winters, A. W. Mansfield and .1. 11. Yaill of Chicago and A. G. De I.any, K. 11. Ettelson. W. .1. Lyons and T. I’. Brosnan of New York. The firm had branch offices in New Yoik, Chicago and twenty other cities in the United States and correspondents in more than thirty cities. Private wires connect the lo cal arid other offices with the leading stock and produce exchanges of the United States and Canada. Nearly COO persons are employed. Mr. Thomson was active in Masonic activities and a member of the Indianapolis Athletic and Columbia Clubs and the Athenaeum. lie is survived by his brother and two sisters, Mrs. Stephen P. Bogert of Indianapolis and Mrs. Ida Schultz of Los Angeles, Cal. He lived at his country home near Thirty-Eighth St. and Pendleton pike. ALARM GETS RESPONSE Police apd officers of the American District Telegraph alarm system, and curious citizens rushed to the Meyer Kiser Bank Tuesday night. The alarm had been turned in accidentally.
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RICH HUSBAND SAYS WIFE HAD ONE BIG THIRST Suit Charges She Was Drunk on Dance Hall of Every Big Hotel. Bn Times Special WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., March 24. —John F. Mahlstedt, a wealthy New York business man, has answered his wife's suit for separation by asserting that Mrs. Mahlstedt "was drunk on the dance floor of every important hotel in New York.” The case, peppered with amusing charges and counter-charges, was heard before Supreme Court Justice Tompkins and a group of interested friends of the couple.' Mrs. Mahlstedt recently brought her suit in New York, alleging abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment. The case was transferred to White Plains and Mahlsledt's counsel presented his side of the affair on Tuesday. The couple c loped and were married in 1922. “In October, 1925, while dancing with Mr. Eisner, president of the Miami Beach Corporation, at the Hotel Plaza, Mrs. Mahlstedt made a spectacle of herself," Humphrey J. Lynch, the defendant's attorney, told the court. Very Drunk “Without mincing words, the plaintiff got very drunk.” “How is that possible now?” interjected Judge Tompkins. “She was able to do so," continued Lynch, urbanely. "At 3 a. m., in the Mahlstedt’s apartment, the plaintiff insisted upon telephoning to Mr. Eisner. Mr. Mahlstedt took the receiver from her and that constitutes one of the alleged acts of cruelty.” “Mrs. Mahlstedt gave a Hallowe'en party at the Westchester Biltmorc Country Club and drank too many high balls," the lawyer proceeded. "She left her guests to enter a private diningroom where members of a golf club were holding a private dinner. She tried to dance with a young man in there, but both fell to the ground. "The manager of the club put Mrs. Mahlstedt out, her husband broke off relations with her, at.d she went home with a young man. "Next morning, while in the bathtub. Mr. Mahlstedt was confronted suddenly by his wife, who was about to strike him on the head with a large hqnd mirror. She had been drinking all night and still had her youthful cohorts with her. He Took Mirror
“The denfendant took the mirror from her and she fainted. "This certainly did not constitute cruelty, as alleged by the plkintlff. “Mr. Mahlsteadt complains that on several occasions his wife slapped his face and called him: ‘you little Irishman.' "We will shov through testimony that Mrs. Mahlstedt has been intoxicated on the dance floor of every important hotel in New York." Mrs. Mahlstedt maintains her husband is "worth half a million dolars," while he replies that his assets do not exceed his liabilities by more than $40,000, that Mrs. Mahlstedt gambled away his fortune at roulette last summer, nnd that as a last straw, she charged a $2,000 mink coat to him the day before she brought suit for separation. INVESTMENTS IS TOPIC Maurice L. Mendenhall, former administrator of the Indiana securities commission, will address the Indianapolis Engineering Society at its Thursday luncheon at the Indianapolis Board of Trade on the subject of investments.
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Beg Your Pardon / The descriptive matter on the Men's $14.95 Spring Suit item, appearing in a Times advertisement of March 19, should have read: “We believe that these suits would ordinarily sell at twice the price we are asking”—instead of these Suits would ordinarily sell for $35 to S4O on credit. THE GLOBE STORE 330 West Washington Street
RELATIVES FEAR SUICIDE ————— Shoe Repair Shop Operator Reported Missing to Police. Fear that John Q. Kurtz, G 6. of 1903 Bellefontaine St., might take his own life was expressed by members of his family, who have report(ed him missing to police. I Kurtz, who operates a shoe repair shop at 51 Kentucky Ave., has been ill for some time, and this may have been the cause for his sudden disappearance, it was said. Kurtz, who is six feet tall, wore a dark over coat when last seen. Relatives said he had a large sum of money with him. SATANIC CULT INVESTIGATED Human Sacrifice Made, Authorities Fear. Bu United Press OAKLAND, Cal., March 24.—Human sacrifices are believed to have formed part of the mystic ritual of "The Satanic Order of Lucifer,” being investigated here. [ The theory was first advanced by •T. F. Galliana, an attorney and has 1 been strengthened by circumstances i surrounding the death of Macario iTimon, a leader in the strange organization. ! Timon’s body was found in his ! home last week, his throat cut from ear to ear. At the time it was lielieved he had been killed because of mining secrets, which he was thodght to possess, but the queerly j marked papers found in his room ! have been linked now with the j "Satanic Order.” i The cult is of Mexican origin. Galliana, deciphering "El Libro Infernal" found among Timon’s effects, j told Tuesday how members of the order inscribed their names on its records, using their own blood for the signatures. Other fantastic customs were described in the book. Some of them have to do with blood sacrifices and. although the killing of human beings was not mentioned specifically, Galliana said he believed the order had adopted that barbarian custom. POST BREAKS RECORD lArge Amount Raised for I/egion Endowment in Small Town. All records in the American Legion campaign for a $5,000,000 endowment fund for disabled veterans and I oryhans of the World War have I been broken by Williamson Post No. 394, at Williamson. N. V.. National ] Commander John R. McQuigg dej dared here today. Williamson Is I one of a number of communities ! which are staging delayed cam- | paigns in an effort to complete the i entire fund. • With a population of only 850, i Williamson leported 750 subscriptions for a total of $2,400. The quota set was SSOO. The subscriptions j ranged from 25 cents to $25 each, j The average subscription was almost j $4 a person, as against a previous j high average of approximately $2 ian inhabitant, made by a California j town. The post lias only forty-six : members. BUSINESS BLOCK SOLD Timothy W. Foran. former Duluth ! (Minn.) dry goods merchant, Tuesday I bought a brick business block at 5535-39 E. Washington St., from Thomas 11. Peters, it was announced by J. D. Brosnan, 1475 N. Delaware St., who negotiated the deal. Consideration was not announced. Build ng is one-story, with 60 foot frontage in Washington St. and 162 foot depth. It consists of three rooms, one of which is occupied by Feters’ dry goods store. Coincident with the sale Peters took a tenyear lease.
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NEW RIOTS IN PEKIN FEARED; OFFICIALS FLEE Diplomatic Corps Refuses Use of Troops, Including Americans. BU United Press PEKIN. March 24.—Chinese officials fled to the foreign quarter seeking protection from students who may at any time engage in another anti-government demonstration such as that in which 33 students lost their lives last week. President Tuan Chi Jui’s residence is enclosed within piles of sandbags behind which the presidential guard would stand off the students if they gathered. In the meantime it was reliably learned that the diplomatic corps today rejected a proposal for the neutralization of Peking and the use of foreign, including American troops to defend the capital against the advancing forces of General Chang Tso Lin and his allies. The Koumen-chien or nationalist troops now in control of the Peking area, but hards pressed by Chang, may suddenly withdraw from the capital and permit it to be taken without opposition. The diplomatic corps refused the neutralization proposal after two se cret sessions. It is understood that the suggestion came from the Nationalist headquarters, which had hoped that the diplomats would refer the demand to the foreign office, after which foreign troops could have been employed to defend the capital. Nationalist spokesmen today called upon the Government to carry out its pledge to preservo order in the capital. Chang and Ills allies. Wu Pei Fu and Li Chlng Ling, have already captured Tien Tsin from the Nationalists in their campaign to gain the entire Peking area. The Nationalist troops were last reported falling hack from all fronts.
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SPARKS START BLAZES Damage of SI,OOO at One Home *ml 8300 at Another. Sparks on the roof of the E. N. Turre residence, 2137 N. Capitol Ave., started a fire late Tuesday that caused SI,OOO damage.. Blaze communicated to liotm of J. J. Moriarity, 2133 N. (apltil Ave., where a S3OO damage ’tssubed. i Fire starting from a short circuit™ in' the wiring of an auto was responsible for a SSO damage t<> the garage of Fred Carter, ill High land Ave., early today. BULLET IN KITCHEN Woman Hears Shot anil Window Glass Fnll During Night. Mrs. Mary Bailey, 515 S. W'armnn Ave., today found a bullet in her kitchen wall and a window glass broken. She said she heard the shot and glass fall during the night. Police believe an intoxicated person fired the shot. Gone! pain stops in one minute CORNS uJ In one minate you forg*t yon ever had a corn —so quick is the relief that Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads give. They stop the cause —pressing or ■ rubbing of shoes. By this safe, sure * method, a new corn can't come where the old one was. You risk no infection from paring your own corns, no danger from lkjuid preparations. Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads are thin, medicated, antiseptic, protective, healing. At your druggist’s or shoe dealer’s—3sc. For free rumple. write The Schott IlfA. Cos., 313 W. Schiller St., Chicego, HI Dl Scholl’s Tsino-pads Put one on—the pain is gone AMUSEMENTS HER HOT. SNAPPY lIIRLKS(|IK PAT WHITE with "Arouml the Town" and MABEL LEA Fast, Snappy—Full o' Prp—tilnger. Illumlnutrd Kunwuy In All ll* Glory GET THAT IMG CHARLESTON FHll>\\ NIGHT ENGLISH’S H HAL. WEEK. MAT. SATIKHAY. ARTHt R lIAMMERSTEIN’S ltig Musical lilt “ROSE-MARIE” With DESIREE ELMNGER nnd ALLAN ROGERS Nitrs, SI.Ill to Sat. Mat.. § xi.io G. $
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