Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 316, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1926 — Page 1
Home Edition Keen insight into human nature ]ifts Williams’ cartoons, “Out Our Way,” above the ordinary. On The Times Comio Page every day.
VOLUME 37—NUMBER 316
Tracy Class Distinction A Puzzle Happy Workmen
15. v M. E. Tracy The British unions are striking j for what we won a century and a half ago—the end of class rule and class distinction. The British law guarantees political liberty and equal rights, but the British social code denies them. This great upheaval is rooted in something bigger than wages, something solider than the froth of radicalism. There are no parallels by which to measure it in this country. Our labor is organized along entirely different lines. We have no king, no aristocracy, no social caste. The average American mechanic regards himself and is regarded as the equal of his employer and entitled to a fair break. He does not regard himself as belonging to a class, or as barred from social, political or economic opportunities because he works with his hands. He is a true trade unionist, willing to organize insofar as it may help solve problems connected with his calling, but utterly opposed to the "one big union’' Idea, The average British mechanic regards himself and is regarded not only as a workman, but as a unit In a hard and fast social order. AVith him, class consciousness is an important factor. He Is made to feel that he moves in a lower circle, that he mustn't expect to hobnob with the lawyer, doctor, minister, or nobility, and that he can get along with less income because he doesn’t have to dress his wife and children as though he could. He bears burdens that his American cousin knows nothing about. .j. .|. .|. Most of us Americans sense this background and the difference it implies without understanding It. We are inclined to take a lukewarm attitude, because of what we sense and to jump at conclusions, because of what we fail to understand. Tt is generally felt, for instance, that we have nothing at stake to warrant interference of any kind. In strange contract to this view there is a real apprehension in some quarters that success of the strike would mean radical tendencies on the part of American labor. There is a belief in other quarters that failure of the strike would make the open shop secure. Such Interest as we display, and it is amazingly slight, goes little farther than to visualize the upheaval as just one more labor dispute. One looks in vain for an intelligent grasp of tiie social problem involved, the revolt of British workers not as so many miners, railroad men, etc., fighting for better pay, but as a class trying to break down the barriers of an almost Hindoo system. -!- •!• T American labor is frankly puzzled, as the statement of William Green suggests. it would like to see the miners win. Tt believes they are underpaid and justified in resisting a reduction of wages. On the other hand, American labor does not believe In a general strike and does pot care to express sympathy with a genera! strike. This all shows how far we have moved from the British system not only in politics, but in industrial relations. •I- -I- -IA radical speaker told the British independent labor party not so long ago that the time had come to strike if the party wanted to force the government to adopt more Socialist measures. He said that capital was learning fast anil that if the labor party permitted it to go on learning it would presently grant workers sufficient pay and sufficient material comforts to make them doubt the vantages of socialism. That is about what has happened in Our workers are too well off under the prevailing order to want a change. They have more automobiles in proportion to their number than British workers have bicycles. They enjoy the privilege of climbing just as high as ambition and ability can carry them. That is why the "one big union” idea finds no favor in this country and why a general strike is practically impossible. NORGE STOPS TO REFUEL Leaves This Afternoon on Hop to King's Hay. Hu United Press VADSOE, Norway, May 6.—The dirigible Norge, en route from Leningrad to King's Bay, Spitzenbergen, where the Amundsen-Ellsworth-No-bile expedition is to begin its flight across the north pole, landed at Uadaoe to refuel at 5:50 a. in. today. The ship will leave for King's Bay at 4 p. m„ where it is due tomorrow -noon. HOURLY TEMPERATURE fi a. m 50 10 a. m 76 7 a. m 62 11 a. m...:*.. 78 8 a. m 68 12 noon) . . 80 0 a. m 72 1 p. m 85 Rent Your Vacant House MRS. W. SMITH. ( 837 N. DREXKL. RENTED a house TO a desirable tenant. WITH a Time* Want Ail. I‘HONE Main 3500 FOR “Rent Ad" results.
The Indianapolis Times cOMP LE T E II EPO R T O F W O RLD- W IDE NEWS J| SERVICE O F THE UNITED PRESS
ESTATE OE ENGLISH ID FOUNDATION Late State Senator Wills Practically Everything to Charity. WIDOW LEFT INCOME Home for Poor, Sick Children in Honor of Daughter. * The bulk of the $2,000,000 estate of the late Statq Senator William E. English goes to the Indianapolis Foundation for charitable purposes upon the death of his widow, Mrs. Helen Orr English, according to his will filed for probate today before Judge Mahlon O. Bash. All of the English Hotel anJ Theater Building, covering the northwest quarter of the Circle, which is not under lease, will become headquarters for Indianapolis’ organized charities when the Foundation takes over the property. _ “Englishton Park Estate, - ' 600acre Scott County country home of the English family since 1818, will be maintained for “poor, sick and Indigent children, primarily of Marlon County and secondarily of ! Scott County." It will be known-as the “Rosalind English Home for Sick and Indigent Children'' as a memorial to his daughter, Mrs. Rosalind English Parsons, who was killed in an automobile accident, near Greencastle in 1924. Widow, Company Executors The widow and the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company were named executors of the estate. The will was dated Nov. 10, 1925. and a codicil, under date of Feb. 10, 1925, made at Miami Beach, Fla., was appended. Senator English died a week ago today, at the age of 71. The codicil provided for transfer of a bronze bust of William H. English, the Senator’s father, from Englishton Park estate to the museum created in the basement of the soldiers' and sailers’ monument, on the Circle. The sculptured bust was the work of Professor Gabbesi of Rome, Italy. The English Hotel' is under lease to an operating company, and if it is not available when the property passes to the Foundation, provision was made for acquiring of a suitable building to be known as the “William E. English Charity Home," where organized charities “shall be permitted without restriction as to race, creed or color, to have their office headquarters, and to have accommodations for the meeting of (Turn to Page !) CEMETERY BILL 10 BE FOUGHT Special Council Meeting This Afternoon. An ordinance to allow establishment of a cemetery on Kesler Blvd., near tlie Broadmoor Country Club was bitterly fought at special council meeting, 2 p. in. today. The meeting was called by Council President Boynten Moore in order that a measure to repeal a present ordinance prohibiting location of a cemetery at that place could he considered. Councilmen Moore, Dr. Austin H. Todd, Walter R. Dorsett and Otis E. Bartholomew were said to favor the cemetery, but opposition was anticipated. Country club members' have objected to the cemetery. MINERS TO USE INJUNCTION NOW Fight Abandonment of Jacksonville Pact. Hu I nit-1 Press MORGANTOWN, \V. Vat, May 6. —Fighting back against abandonment of the Jacksonville wage scale, union miners will resort to that weapon they have so long combatted —the c*ourt injunction. An injunction to restrain the Cleveland-Morgantown Coal Company and the Connellsvllle Bi-Prod-ucts Company from operating their mines on wage scales lower than the union agreement, will bo asked by union officials here tomorrow. The action of the union makes Monogalia County the battle ground of the United Mine Workers to retain their prestige in the soft coal fields. This will ho the link time the United Mine Workers of America have sought an injunction to require a coal company to stand by its agreement, Van A. Bittner, international representatvie said.
“WE WILL NOT CALL OFF STRIKE, ” LABOR’S DEFY
# Copyright. 1926. by NEA Service. Inc., ami The London Time*. This photograph shows volunteer English workers in Hyde Park, London, manning motor lorries to distribute milk to London'9 babies and invalids. Hyde Park lias been closed lo the public and is being used as a depot for the city’s milk supply. This picture was taken Tuesday, after Britain's 5,000,000 union workers had walked out, and was sent to NEA Service's New York bureau by radio photo.
Unions Answer No to Demand of Baldwin —Rioting Increasing Hourly. Hu I nit fit Press LONDON, May 6.—Labor today replied with an unqualified “no" to Premier Baldwin's demand that the general strike bo called off as the price for the government's resumption of peace negotiations. “We are ready at any moment.” the Trades Union Council officially announced, "to resume negotiations for an honorable settlement. But it is impossible to comply with Premier Baldwin's demand that we first unconditionally cancel the strike. "Our reply to that must be an unqualified ‘no.’ "Negotiations must be resumed in a free and unfettered atmosphere." British industry was feeling the full effects of the strike. Factory after factory was closing owing to the exhaustion of fuel reserves. A steady revival of transixirt was evident, but this was inct by increased effort to intimidate strike-breaking bus or taxi drivers. The struggle is hardening into a contest of British stubbornness, with pekoe efforts temporarily submerged. Both sides hammered awry at their slogans, -which were identical: “Fight to a finish.” Labor tightened its grip on London when taxi drivers joined the general walkout. All cabs but a few wero idle, thereby cancelling the improvement in suburban train service, which on some lines is onethird of normal. Subway officials announced today that all lines in London would be operating before night. The Bishop of Oxford has called a mass meeting for tonight to urge re (Turn to Page 9) 500 TEAMSTERS STRIKE Suspension of Building Program at Hammond Seen. Hu Unitril Press HAMMOND, Ind., May 6.—Suspen sion of work on the big building program of the Calumet district was threatened today by a strike of 500 teamsters, many of whom were hauling material for the buildings. The men quit work when the ’Teaming and Truck Owners’ Association refused their demand l'or a 5-cent hourly wage increase.
She Was So Fat She Waddled • ' “You're so fat you waddle.” This remark made to Idah McGlone Gibson by a close personal friend started the famous writer of fiction on a~reducing campaign which peeled off forty pounds in five months. Now, Mrs. Gibson is going to give women readers of The Times the benefit of her experience in a series of twenty articles, the first of which will appear in The Times next Monday. in these articles Mrs. Gibson tells, in detajl, the methods she used to bring down her weight. "Whether you are 16 of 60 you must march with your regiment,” says Mrs. Gibson, in one of these articles. “When all the world is talking about slender women—for slender women mean clever women — —you are falling by the wayside unnoticed if you are too fat to keep up with the other marchers." Mrrf. Gibson relates that she weighed 199 pounds when the proximity of the 200 mark frightened, her into launching her desperate effort to reduce her surplus poundage. Now. she weighs between 160 and 165. Don't fail to read the first of these articles in The Times next Monday.
INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, MAY G, 1926
TWO MORE FLEEING CONVICTS CAPTURED ' Only Three of Band Who Slew Warden and Fought Gun Battle With Posse Remain at Large.
/>' I nilrit l‘i i ks JOLIET. 111, May il Two more* of the seven convicts, who Wednesday made a spectacular dash from Stateville prison here, after slaying Deputy Warden Peter Klein, were captured today near Streator, according to word received at the warden's office. Two others are in a Streator hospital following a. gun battle with vigilantes Wednesday night. The last two were captured In a barn loft near Streator by one prison officer and two Streator officers. The remaining three are believed to l>e hiding In a woods near Leo- j none where the battle occurred. A j posse of farmers was planning to make a systematic search of the woods. Greggerio Rizzio and Robert Torrez. the two oonvicts who were wounded and captured in the battle at Leonore, will recover. Two policemen were also injured. First, news cf disorders leaked out at the State penitentiary here shortly after noon Wednesday. From evidence left behind authorities decided the men stabbed Klein to HOUSE ORDERS NIGHT SESSIONS Time Needed for Debate on Farm Relief. II il I nit rit Peru, WASHINGTON, May 6.—Night sessions were < rdered by the House today to meet demands for time for debate on depending farm relief legislation. Representative Tilson, Connecticut, majority leader, obtained consent for a three hour session tonight and planned to have the same arrangement tomorrow night. “Our plans to adjourn by June 1 do not look very good," Tilson said. "If the group of Senators still insist on staying here until farm legislation Is cleaned up, 1 have no idea when an adjournment will come." STATETO CLEAN ITS DEBT SLATE $1,000,000 General Fund Note Will Be Paid. Indiana's general fund debt, which stood at approximately $2,000,000 two years ago, will be obliterated June 30 when the State finance committee pays off the last $1,000,000 note. With the exception of $340,000 owing the Purdue University fund, the Stage's books will be clean. This fund, according to Deputy State Auditor 1,. C. Johnson, was created by Federal appropriation to be held In trust by the State, interest accruing to the credit of the university. It is improbable that the State ever will be required to pay the principal. Payment of the final note, held by a local bank, will save the State more than $40,000 a year in interest. — DESIGNS HELICOPTER LONDON—Sir Bradford Leslie, famous bridge builder, is finishing a design of a helicopter which, if it flies, will become the propity of the British government. Sir Bradford, who is 95, has been working oil the model fifteen years.
death then, under threat of death, marched J. W. Keely, captain of the guard, to the prison garage, where he commandeered Klein's own automobile and threw open the prison gates. A trusty, John Cassidy, was employed as chauffeur. Keely and Cassidy were forced to accompany the fugitives until they reached Marseilles, where they were unloaded and handcuffed together to a tree with Keely's prison handcuffs. The fugitives then continued in their automobile and Keely and Cassidy were found this morning. The Battle The seven .-.re then believed to have split. Five sneaked into I.eonore by round-about methods. Citizens hud been notified and were armed. When the men reached the mid-section of the village they were seen and the tattle started. The vigilantes pumped buckshot into the despradoes and the challenge was met by the escaping crim inals who had looted farm houses and obtained revolvers. The battle lasted ten minutes, three of the men finally fleeing, leaving two wounded. BUS SERVICE COMPLAINT Commission Gets Petition From Martinsville Une Patrons. Complaint on bus service of the T. If., I. & E. Traction Company between Martinsville and Indianapolis was made in a. petition signed by seventeen patrons of the line, presented the public service commission today. The petition ‘alleged that only one bus each way Is being operated daily and asked that the commission order at least, three trips ach way each day. Petitioners live in Valley Mills, West Newton, Mooresville and Camby. BALLOON TEAM PICKED Van Orman Officially Declared Winner in National Race. Hu United Press LITTLE ROCK. Ark.. May 6. Ward T. Van Orman, pilot of the "Goodyear IV”; Capt. Hawthorne C. Gray, pilot of the Army’s “S-23," and John A. Boetttner, pilot of the Akron National Aeronautical Association, were declared today tional winners in the order named of the national balloon race which started last Thursday. These three will compose the American team in the Gordon Bennett international race, to start at Antwerp. Belgium, May 30.
FLAPPER FANNY*SAYS
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The tight embrace originated in Scotland.
FRAUD RUIZ STARTED BY PROSECUTOR Grand Jury Investigates Reports of Count Manipulation. AFFIDAVITS PRESENTED Seven Precincts Not Heard From at Noon. An investigation of the primary election was begun today by the Marion County grand jury on orders of Prosecutor William 11. Remy, who said he had information that attempts were to be made to manipulate the count of ballots in same city precincts for the benefit of certain Republican candidates. At the same time Deputy Prosecutor William H. Shaeffer in charge of the grand jury, was investigating affidavits turned over to him by the Marion County Voters League charging election frauds. Persons who swore to the affidavits will be tailed before the jury, Shaeffer said. Repeat Voters Remy also said he had received | reports that a number of persons I had voted several times. Particular attention 'will be paid to precincts where counting of the | ballots is not completed until iate. |\t noon returns from seven pre- | cincts had not been received. Election officials who had worked since Tuesday morning, many of them without sleep, were near exhaustion. W ork j 8 Hours Election Commissioners Ira Holme's. Frank Baker and Gideon Blaine only had time off to eat. Members of tlie canvassing board at work in Superior Court One and precinct officials in precincts where the count had not been completed, had also been at work for over fortyeight hours. Tally sheets from several precincts were incorrectly filled out when received today. It was necessary to send them back so they might he corrected in the presence of the precinct board according to law. BRITISH STRIKE AIARMSBERGER Nationalization of Railways, Telegraph, Phones Sought. Hu I nlted Pres* WASHINGTON, May 6.—Nationalization of railroad, telegraph, telephone and express properties engaged in Interstate commerce was proposed in a hill by Representative Berger, Socialist, Wisconsin, for introduction in the House today. Private ownership of public utilities must eventually lead to struggles now occurring in England, which has all the characteristics of civil war, Berger said in making public the measure. Under his bill, a Federal department of transportation and telegraphs would administer the operations. The measure provides for payment to the present owners on a basis of actual valuation and for the esetblishment of “advanced” labor j conditions in these industries. NEW APARTMENT PLANNED A building permit for a $150,000 apartment house at 3419 N. Pennsylvanla St., has been issued to Arthur Baynham, 3232 Central Ave.
FOUR PERSONS ARE INJURED BY AUTOS Two Seriously Hurt —Three Are Children Father and Son Struck —Boy, in Accident Wednesday, May Die.
Four persons were injured, two seriously, in accidents early today. Another person, hurt yesterday, may die. Three of those Injured were children. Addison Lee, 51, and his son, Jackie, 5, of 920 Ashland Ave., were in city hospital in critical condition, Authorities said the boy may die at any moment. Police said the father and son were walking toward town on Massachusettts Ave. The father holding his son's hand dashed from the path of one auto and was struck by an auto following, driven by Aaron Pollard. 603 N. Senate Ave.. according to police. Both were knocked to the pavement and the wheels passed over them, witnesses say. The boy has a fractured skull and leg. and body lacerations, and the father a possible fracture of the skull and body injuries. Pollard was not arrested. An auto, owned and driven by Elwood Johnson, city fireman, 821 W. Thirty-First St., struck Evelyn Prall, 11, of 220 Spring St., at 330 N. Noble St. Johnson, who Is a chauffeur for Batallion Chief E. G. Hinchman, at Engine House 8. was driving Hinchman home when the accident happened. The girl's head struck the curb. She was taken home, apparent-
Entered as Second-class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis. Published Daily Except Sunday.
R UNA WA YS BACK AFTER ADVENTURE ' Bruce and Alice Hinsley How they lived three days on 35 1 'cents worth of jelly, bread and crackers was told today by Bruce llinsley, 9, jand his sister, Alice Hlnsley, 11, cf 347 S. Walcott St., who ran away from home Monday to “enjoy the world” after they were refused movie money Sunday. “It's not so much fun," said Alice, but Bruce spoke glowingly of the pleasures of not having to go to school, or wash, or go to bed at bedtime. They returned home Wednesday night. They said they sold 25 cents worth of old iron and bottles given them by a man who was moving and bought two glasses of jelly, costing 20 cents, and 5 cents worth of crackers. This was all they had to eat while gone, they said, except loaf of bread, which they charged to the family grocery bill, Monday. They slept Monday night in a downtown stairway, leading to a basement restaurant, without police interference, they said. Tuesday night they slept on the porch of Mrs. Bessie Foltz, 69 N. Keystone Ave., a niece of their father, Ralph Hinsiey, Pennsylvania railroad sheet metal worker. They ate their crackers and bread and jelly in a vacant garage, they said. They did not remember where it was. “Ilm," said Bruce, “I bet we couldn't find it right now if we hail to." "It's too hard and lonesome," said Alice. “I'll never run away again." Bruce evaded answering his mother if he would leave if the opportunity presented itself again. “A policeman saw us. but. he didn't say anything,” Alice said, telling of sleeping downtown. The runaways said their minds were not made up to run away when they started to school. Monday, though they had considered it, but that picking dandelions delayed them until they would have been late for school, so they played “hookey” and as a result were afraid to go home at night. The little girl used a pair of snippers off a parked tin wo r leers’ truck to cut her high-top shoes down to pumps because it “was cooler." AUTO DRIVER IS SOUGHT t> olice Investigate After Finding Deserted Machine. Deputy sheriffs communicated with Blountsville police today to learn the whereabouts of a Virgil Cook. An auto bearing that, name on the certificate of title was found deserted on the banks of Eagle Creek at Stop 1, T. H., I. & E. traction line, Danville division. The title called for a larger make auto. Police suspect either that the car was stolen or that the owner committed suicide or was murdered. STROKE KILLS FIREMAN James M. Mullin Succumbs to Attack of Apoplexy. A stroke of apoplexy today was fatal to James M. Mullin, Jl49t S. West St., a city fireman for eighteen years. Funeral services likely will be held Monday at St. John’s Church with burial, in Holy Cross cemetery. >lr. Mullin was Engine House No. 4 captain for many years, lie had been a private, however, since the first of the year. He was a brother of John Mullin, former head of the Indianapolis detective bureau. The widow and four children survive.
ly not seriously hurt. Police say she ran from the sidewalk into the path of the auto. Betty Jane McKee, 3, was injured about the head when she wandered into the traffic at Delaware and Market Sts. and was struck bv an auto driven by George Kuhn, 21, of 2522 N. Sherman Dr. _ The l'ttle girl had been standing in the safety zone with her mother, Mrs. Harry McKee, 3737 Prospect St., but toddled away. Her condition was not serious, it was said at city hospital. Kuhn was charged with assault and battery, though Mrs. McKee exonerated him. Charles Seibert, 5, of 1252 W. Thirtieth SL, is in critical condition at city hospital. He was taken there la e- Wednesday after he had been struck by an auto near his home. Witnesses say the boy ran Into the path of the auto. He has a fractured skull a'nd leg and cuts on the head and body. Autos driven by Mrs. J. K. Kings bury, 72 N. Irvington Ave., and Everett Courtney, 857 N. Bosart Ave., collided at Southeastern Ave. and Washington St. Wednesday. Police say Henrv Ball. 809 N. East St., riding with Courtney, suffered cuts on the head. I
Forecast Fair tonight; Friday, increasing cloudiness; continued mild temperature predicted.
TWO CENTS
HIGHER-UPS SOUGHT IN RUMJEAL Negro Federal Employes Indicted —Admit Taking Some of Liquor. ■WHO GOT REST, QUESTION Must Have Had Help in Squibb Plot, Ward Says. Following indictment of three Federal Bldg. Negro employes on charges of conspiring to violate the prohi- | bition law. United States District I Attorney Albert Ward continued his hunt, for higher-ups in investigation of robbery of 330 cases of confiscated Squibb liquor from the Federal Bldg, basement. ! The Negroes admitted the theft ]of about thirty ctises to a Times reporter. Authorities said they had confessed to removing upward of 200 eases. Defendants were to be arraigned before Federal Judge Baltzell this afternoon, following their indictment this morning. Federal Clerk WilliamP. Kappes issued capiases for the j arrests on the Federal charge to J Linus Meredith, United States marshal. Who Got Rest? Ward also will be faced with the problem of discovering how much of the missing 330 cases, worth $74,000, the three Negroes stole, and what j became of the remainder. For, interviewed by a Times reporter today, they said they stole | only a pari of the missing booze. They admitted taking “about j thirty cases.” Lieut. George Winkler, who aid•i ed in tlie arrest, said they admitted taking 200 cases. Ward did not Indicate whether he suspected any Federal building offiI cials or attaches as the higher-ups. | He said, however: "A man naturally would have his j suspicions three Negroes didn't earI ry out all that stuff.” Ward said that the Federal grand jury investigation of the disappearenee of the liquor, valued at $74,000, (bootleg prices), would continue with tlie hope that the confessed thieves and the higher-up who inspired the robbery, planned it and arranged for disposition of the booze, would be indicted at the earliest possible hour. Needed More Time “I would rather we had had a day or so more secrecy on the thing and we might have had something more startling," Ward declared. United States Department of Justice Agent Louis Loebl, who arrested the trio after a three-week investigation of the robbery, and Lieutenant Winkler, former prohibition agent group chief, appeared before the grand jury at 9 a. m. In City Prison The Negroes held in city prison are Joseph Shores, 1021 Coe St., Federal Bldg-, watchman; "Lander Dearson, 2402 Ralston St., Federal Bldg, janitor, and William H. Marshall. 315 W. Forty-Fifth St., red- ' eral Bldg., fireman. I .Winkler ml lyiebl said the trio i confessed they removed the hinge* I from ihe liquor room door in the Federal building basement, usually late at night and carried out the booze in small newspaper-wrapped parcels to a white bootlegger on the outside, j The first_ overt act was committed Oct. 23, 1923, when Marshall entered the warehouse by pulling pins from hinges on the door and removed ten eases the indictment charged. Paid Others The indictment states Marshall paid Dearson $250 in United States money and Shores $l5O two days later. On April 21. 1924. ten more cases were removed, the jury charged, and on May 1 Marshall paid Dearson $l4O. Wearing his gold braided blue cap I bearing a gold United States pin, j Shores told a Times reporter how lie was unable to resist the tempta- ! tion to "get some cash" by turning | the whisky into bootleg channels. "The thought of it was too fasJ cinating,” declared the watchman, who has served at the Federal Bldg, twenty-two years. "I’ve seen the door close on a jury room many times, but I never expected my name would appear on the indictment," he said. Shore, who said lie never actually handled any of the liquor, talked more freely than Dearson or Marshall. He said he was a good friend of Ward and Judge Baltzell, and had the highest respect for them. At Their Merry “We're at their mercy now. They can give us a year and a day anyhow. and maybe more," he said. “No we didn't get anyway* near all of it. I Mispicloned some of it was going out. Maybe it was taken h.v someone with keys. Shores said he always did he- % Hove tlie liquor was “switched,” when being slopped here. “It tvns checked by rows when It first arrived," Shores recalled. "Os course we didn't get anything like wha tit was worth. That wat> | too good liquor to sell for S6O, what jwe got. I'U bet the fellow who got it from us sold it for a nice sum." I Shores .maintained the elevator In, 'the west end of the building was (Turn to Page 15, \
