Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 26, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1927 — Page 1

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SCRIPPS-HOW ARD

SPARKS WILL BE JUDGE IN DUVALL CASE Mayor’s Defense Counsel Choose Rushville Man to Preside. BAN CRAIG AND ALFORD Acceptance Is Deferred by Jurist Pending Receipt of Official Word. Judge Will Sparks of Circuit Court at Rushville, Ind., today was chosen to try Mayor John L. Duvall and City Controler William C. (Chick) Buser on charges of conspiracy to falsify Duvall’s campaign expense statement. Sparks was appointed, subject to his acceptance, by Criminal Judge James A. Collins, after Duvall and Buser had moved for a change of venue from Collins, on the ground that he is so biased and prejudiced against them that they cannot give them a fair trial. Sparks was chosen after Prosecutor William H. Remy had struck the name of Judge John F. Craig of Circuit Court at Greensburg, Ind., and the defense had struck Fremont Alford, Indianapolis attorney from the list of three candidates furnished by Collins. Sparks was the remaining judge. Waits Official W'ord Sparks in a telephone conversation with The Times said: “I cannot indicate whether I will accept until I have received official wood of my selection. I expect Judge Collins will call me today.” Sparks said his father-in-law is seriously ill and his presence in Rushville is required for the time being. Rollins said he would notify Judge { ■larks by letter. Defense and State Plreed that the case in which Duvall and Buser are charged with conspiring to commit a felony—the only one of seven affidavits involving Buser—would be tried, but that ifany other case is selected Sparks willbe agreeed upon as the judge. Defer Arraignment Date Duvall and Buser have not been arraigned. Date probably will be set when the special judge assumes jurisdiction. The arraignment had been set for last Monday, but Duvall maneuvered out by having his attorneys tell Collins when he was called that he would ask for a special judge. Then Collins set this morning as the date for receiving the motion. The mayor, Buser and their battery of attorneys stepped jauntily into Criminal Court room at 9:05 a. m„ the mayor and Buser nodding to acquaintances in the packed courtroom. Await Judge’s Attention Judge Collins was receiving a verdict in a Negro ntvrder case and the defendants took seats on the front row of the spectators’ benches. Then they filed to the defense tables. Defense attorneys included John C. Ruckleshaus, Eph Inman, M. A. Ryan, Martin Hugg and Harvey Grabill. Prosecutors, including Remy, Deputy William H. Sheaffer and Special Prosecutors Emsley W. Johnson and John W. Holtzman, ■took their seats. JyThen Attorney Ryan presented seven motions for change of judge, one upon each affidavit. Collins gave his stenographer a copy of the three candidates for special judge and handed lists to the State and defense. Craig’s Name Eliminated After a brief conference with his colleagues, Remy struck off the name of Judge Craig of Greensburg. The defense asked for time and retired, with Duvall and Buser, to the prosecutor's office. They conferred for about fifteen minutes, returned, and asked for more time. The judge gave them until 10:30 a. m. and the party went to the Ryan, Ruckelshaus & Ryan suite, 400 Indiana Trust Bldg. The defense party returned at 10:30 and informed the judge they had struck off Alford. Attorneys. Ryan laid the sheet bearing the three judges’ names on the bench. It had scribbling all over it. “'What’s this,” inquired Collins, pointing to some marks, “a drawing of the American Flag?” “No,” commented Ryan, dryly, “its a picture of the nineteenth hole.” Arrested May 17 Duvall and Buser were arrested May 17, after Prosecutor William H. Remy and his aids filed affidavits charging them with conBpiracy to commit a felony. Duvall ns charged with making false affidavit, perjury and violation of the corrupt practice act in four instances. Buser is alleged to have placed the notary public seal on Duvall’s campaign statement which snowed expenditure of $l3O and did not show a $14,500 alleged contribution by William H. Armitage, politician.

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VOLUME 39—NUMBER 26

Named Judge

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If. Circuit Jyige Will Sparks of Rushville accepts appointment as special judge for the DuvallBuser conspiracy trial, some history of the D. C. Stephenson murder trial at Noblesville in November, 1925, will be repeated. Judge Sparks presided in the Stephenson case; William H. Remy was the prosecutor, and Attorney Eph Inman of Duvall’s staff was a leader in Stephenson’s legal staff. v

STEVE TOLD OF MUCHAT QUIZ Further Steps After Transcript, Eichorn Says. “’D. C. Stephenson talked freely and offered considerable information to the board of charities," former Judge W. H. Eichhorn, Bluffton, board member, asserted today at th Statehouse. Eichhorn was conferring with Secretary John A. Brown regarding the investigation. Both declared that no further steps would be taken until a transcript of all prison testimony is prepared. Eichhorn conferred regarding charges that Stephenson, former Klan dragon, serving a life term for murder, has been mistreated. Eichhorn preferred the inquiry should be referred to as private, not secret. The privacy aided, he-said. “Stephenson was assured that no prison official would have any knowledge of his testimony and that is why he talked,” he said. In addition to Stephenson. John Moorman, prison trustee, and Warden Walter H. Daly testified, he said. Whether the board would take further testimony was not stated. Report is to be ready for Governor Jackson and prison trustees “not later than July 1,” Morris M. Feuerlicht, board member, declared. The trustees meet as a pardon board at that time.

BANDIT TWINS HAPPY D’Autremonts Sing to Delight Crowd at Jail. By United Press STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, June 10. —Roy and Ray D’Autremont. 26, bandit twins captured as the dimax of a man hunt that lasted three and one-half years, may be taken to Oregon to testify in the trial of their younger brother, Hugh, before being tried for murder in connection with the Siskiyou tram robbery. This was indicated when United States Marshal W. B. Bartell, Columbus, instructed United States Deputy Commissioner C. J. Borkowski to temporarily hold the twins, pending arrival of the Department of Justice and postal bureau heads. The twins continued in high spirits, singing French songs to the delight of crowds who lined the alley way in rear of city prison. SURRENDER BY SLAYER Man Tells Denver Police He Killed State Senator. Bu l nited Press DENVER, Colo., June 10.—Joseph Minter, wanted in connection with the slaying of State Senator Albert E. Bogdon, surrendered to police today.

Manager Form Debated at Chamber Luncheon

Office holders and employes at the Courthouse, polled on the city manager question, voted: For, 7; against, 18; undecided, 3. Charles F. Coffin, city manager executive chairman, and Samuel Ashby, former corporation counsel, debated the manager plan at the Chamber of Comerce open forum luncheon today. Edward Hunter, secretary, said the result of the mail poll of Chamber members on the manager drive would be announced Saturday. Dick Miller, Chamber president, named a Judge for and one against to count the votes. Hunter said about 3,000 ballots were received. “An optimits is to be congratu-

W. C. T. U. IS FREED FROM LIQUOR QUIZ Gilliom Withdraws Questions to Organization After Conference. HASTY ACTION. REASON Central Body Head Says Some Explanation Is Due Him. Central W. C. T. U. members, meeting this afternoon at the Fletcher-American Bank building, were released from answering two pointed questions regarding their stand on medicinal liquor. The questions asked by Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom after the organization had passed resolutions condeming his stand for modification of the Indiana law to permit doctors to prescribe whisky, were: “Would you, a mother, refuse to condone the use of whisky if prescribed by your family physician for use for your own dying child? “Since the Volstead act permits the use of whisky as medicine, would you favor changing it to conform with the Inoiana statutes, which forbid it?” Confer Two Hours Mrs. Bert S. Gadd. Central W. C. T. U. president, asked Gilliom to release the organization from answering the questions, on the ground that the resolutions were railroaded through and noi truly representative. She and her husband conferred with him tw r o hours this morning. The questions were withdrawn by Gilliom in the following letter, to be presented today by Mrs. Gadd: “It appears that your published resolution of May 28 is not a reliable expression of the sentiment of your membership, as shown In your request that I withdraw the suggestion that you consider the two questions stated by me. “That seems reasonable, since its effect is to condemn the provision of a medicine deemed necessary in the near fatal illness of one of your own good members (the wife of the Governor), as well as to condemn the suggestion that this medicine be made guardedly available when deemed necessary by physicians for others. “But such resolutions, hastily passed at the instance of ulterior influences, are harmful to the cause for which you stand and which the Gpvernment is trying to make successful. “In the light of these circumstances. I comply with your request. to avoid for you any embarrassment that consideration of these questions might- cause you.” Statement to Be Given Mrs. Gadd announced that a statement regarding the meeting would be made at its close. She and her husband were high in their praise of Gilliom and said the conference was most satisfactory. “I regret the passage of that resolution and its consequent publicity.” Mrs. Gadd said. “I feel explanation is due Mr. Gilliom.” VIRGINIA FEELS QUAKE Residents at State University Awakened Early Today. BU I nited Pres* UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA, Va., June 10.—Earth shocks severe enough to awaken many residents were felt here at 2:16 a. m. today. The seismograph at the Rouse Physical Laboratory of the University of Virginia recorded the first shock, lasting ten seconds and slight tremors thirty seconds later. can Child Crawls Into Container— Mother Finds Body. Bu I nih il l”cit* PITTSBURGH, June 10.—Andrew Rock, 2, climbed from an armchair into a five-gallon ice cream can. His mother found him drowned in water and ice.

lated and commended,” with Indianapolis the butt of jokes throughout the country because of the cit’s political mess, Frank E. Gates, chairman of the manager campaign committee, told the Optimist Club at luncheon at the Claypool. Such optimism must be founded on faith that Indianapolis will clean house by voting in the manager form, Gates said. The Rev. Clarence G. Boker spoke at a neighborhood meeting at 3525 Massachusetts Ave. Homer Borst, Community Fund secretary, will speak at 2917 Central Ave. at 8 p. ni. E. O. Snetnen will speak Saturday night at Castle HalL

INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 10,1927

Happy? 40,000 Children Say They Are; School’s Out

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Betty Jane Donncr, 3641 Graceland Ave.

Think these youngsters were not happy today? They had two reasons to be. It was the last day of school and they were promoted at Public School 43. Fortieth St. and Capitol Ave. Some forty thousand joyful children today marched from the various ward school buildings into a three months’ vacation from the worries of readin.’ ’ ritin’ and ’ritlimetic.

RUSS EXEGUTE BRITISH AGENTS Twenty Put to Death; Seven Rated Spies. Bu Vnited Press MOSCOW, June 10.—Twenty monarchist white guards and spies alleged to have been in the pay of foreign intelligence services, principally Great Britain, have been executed, M. Menjinskl, chief of the Soviet political police, announced today. Those executed included an Englishman, six others alleged to be in English pay, and two Russian princes. * Menjinski alleged that some of those executed attempted to take the lives of four Soviet government heads, including G. V. Chicherin, foreign minister: A. I. Rykov, president of the union council qf People's commissaries, and Stalin and Bukharin. The Englishman, Sidney Riley, alleged to have been a spy, and another man, George Elvengren, who was also executed, attempted to kill Chicherin and others upon their return from Genoa, the police chief said. He alleged that they were traveling at the expense of the British government. Three of those who died were alleged to have been agents or spies for British Charge d’Affaires Hodg-son-Vladirim Evrinov, Nicola Koropenko and Sergei Mazurenkol; two others, Malevich-Malevsky and Alexander Skalsky, were alleged to have been in the British intelligence service. The tw r o Princes executed were Prince Dologorukov and Prince Mescherski.

LAKE STORM KILLS TWO; SEVEN BODIES HUNTED Score Able to Reach Shore; Twin City Boats Capsize. ' MIDLAND, Minn., June 10.—Efforts were being made today to recover the bodies of seven persons believed drowned in a Mille Lacs storm. Nearly a score of persons were rescued or reached lake shore unaided. The storm overturned a number of boats. Two boats, occupied by at least six Twin City residents, capsized. Then a rescue boat from Midland was overturned, causing two deaths in the rescue party. Midland, about a half mile away, organized a rescue party. ARREST IN BANK THEFT Sheriff Nabs Cigar Clerk; Another Let Go. Bu Time* Special ELWOOD, Incf., June 10.—Sheriff Frank Daniels, probing the Lapel State Bank robbery, has taken into custody Valley Blair, 23. cigar store clerk. He will be questioned. The sheriff released Deal Phillips, 21, also of this city, after he proved that he was here at the time the Lapel bank was being robbed. Phillips told officers he knew Robert W. Goodnight, 27, Elwood barber, who ha? admitted a part in the hold-up.

Butter Flies Bu Untied Press WASHINGTON. June 10.— Butter flown by plane from his home tow r n by a boyhood friend will grace the table of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, at the temporary White House over the week-end. The National Cooperative Milk Producers’ Association received a telegram from the Land O’ Lakes Creameries, Inc., of Little Falls, Minn., Lindbergh’s rearing place saying a plane left there with a tub of best butter this morning and would arrive here tomorrow morning. In the plane were Pilot L. C. Miller. Lindy's pal, and Arthur Rydquist, buttermaker.

Betty Feasey, 125 Blue Ridge Rd.

Hero of Sky and Mother Nearing Meeting Place

Mrs. Lindbergh Sought to Avoid Publicity by Leaving Train. Hus nit* and Pres * WASHINGTON. June 10.—Mrs. Evangeline Lindbergh, modest mother of a modest hero, will arrive in Washington about 3 p. m. today, Indianapolis time. President Coolidge’s car, bearing one of his junior aides, will bring her to the capital city from Baltimore. Md., where for a time today her whereabouts was a mystery. The White House announced that Mrs. Lindbergh was at the Hotel Belvedere, Baltimore, where she went after quietly alighting from the “Red Arrow” special at Mt. Washington station early today. ’The mother of Charles A. Lindbergh was en route here to welcome, with the capital, her heroic airman son. True to the modest and retiring nature which she and her son have shown through days of world admiration, Mrs. Lindbergh sought to avoid publicity. In doing this she tried to hide by alighting at the Baltimore suburb, but a Pennsylvania Railroad detective captain, William A. Palmer, at Baltimore and a sleuthing press spoiled her plans. Palmer located her and offered her automobile transportation. Meantime, the press of Baltimore and Washington sought to trail her, locating her in the Baltimore hotel shortly before the White House announced its plans for fetching her from the Maryland city. She left Detroit early last night, traveling as an ordinary passenger, having declined the offers of several railroads, including the Pennsylvania, to give her a special car. She had a lower berth.

Thriller Is Staged by Lindy in Vessel Climb

Bu United Pres* ABOARD THE MEMPHIS, EN ROUTE TO WASHINGTON. June 10. —Col. Charles A. Lindbergh treated the officers, crew', correspondents and photographers on the steamship Memphis to a real scare yesterday. After posing with the crew and later with the radio men, the flier borrowed one of the cameras, saying he wanted to take a couple of shots of the ship. Slinging the bulky camera over his shoulder he grabbed the narrowrope ladder on the foremost mast and. as calmly as if he were pacing the ship’s deck, ascended the shaky ladder in the face of a forty-eight-mile wind.

Reaching the Crow’s Nest he found that the smokestack interfered with his view to the after part of the ship and his crated plane. The ship was rolling, but Lindbergh stepped from the Crow's Nest to the starboard yardarm. With the wind blowing his blonde hair wildly in his face and the camera swinging at his side, the flier pulled himself across the yardarm over the ship's side, braced himself against a steel rope, around which he flung one arm, unslung the camera with his other, and took his “shots.” Then he climbed back and descended. Not the least bit perturbed, he went to the bridge and conversed with Captain Lackey before going below to read the lunch time radios. BOOK SALESMAN FINED Bu United Press BOSTON, June 10.—Convicted of selling an obscene book, Upton Sinclair’s new novel “Oil,” John Gritz, Boston booksellers’ clerk, was fined SIOO by Municipal Judge William Sullivan here today. Gritz appealed and the case was entered for trial in Superior Court, July 5. Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m 70 10 a. m 77 7 a. m 73 11 a. m 278 8 a. m 74 12 (Noon) fit 79 9 a. 76 l p. 78

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indiana polls

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Ernest Rosseter, 3748 Kenwood Ave. Margaret

Simultaneously with the closing of schools, there came a warning, which, if heeded, will insure the return to school next year of each chtld, without accident. The warning came from Police Chief Claude Johnson and Dr. Paul F. Robinson, coroner, and asked each child to heed the safety warnings taught during the year.

Destroyer Goes to Cruiser Memphis and Removes News Films. Bu l nited Pee** ABOARD THE UNITED STATES STEAMSHIP MEMPHIS EN ROUTE TO WASHINGTON, June 10.—The destroyer Humphries met the cruiser Memphis at sea this morning and took aboard a mailsack full of news films of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, New YorkParis flier, after which the cruiser resumed its homeward journey at a speed of 23 1 : knots. It virtually marked a contact with land for the Memphis, and officers i and men were elated at the realization that they were almost home. | Most of them got up at 3:30 a. m. so they would not miss the Humphries. Lindbergh, however, slept through it all. With the crossing all but over, the j Memphis has broken all speed rec--1 ords for warships across the Atlan- ! tic in spite of unfavorable winds and heavy seas most of the way. If the cruiser had landed at New Y irk instead of Washington it probably would have broken the record held by the Cunarder Mauretania for the fastest c-ossing from Cherbourg to New York. The Memphis at 11 a. m. today i Indianapolis time) was 80 miles off the Virginia capes. It was . headed straight for Chesapeake i Bay. The propellers were turning ’ at a speed of twenty-four knots an hour, but the ship was moving two knots slower because of adverse winds and the gulf stream, the i latter flowing eastward. Today's call by the destroyer ! ended the solitude which lasted since Tuesday when the cruiser I sighted the steamer Bremen.

CITIES m FLIERS Columbia Will Visit Vienna, Warsaw, Prague, Rome. Hu L nited Prctt* \ BERLIN. June 10. Clarence Chamberlin and Charles Levine will visit four European capitals on their air tour. The aviators will leave Berlin, Sunday morning in the airplane Columbia and lunch in Munich. In the afternoon they will fly to Vienna. Then to Prague, Czecho-Slovakia for two days before proceeding to Warsaw, Poland. From Warsaw they will fly to Rome. Both expressed special desire to visit Italy because it is the birthplace of G. M. Bellanca, designer of the Columbia. Mrs. Chamberlin and Mrs. Levine who will arrive at Bremen on the liner Berlin, June 17, will be taken by airplane to Tempelhoff Field, Berlin. LINDY A BRICKLAYER Bu United Press NEW YORK. June 10,-Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh has been made an honorary member of the Bricklayers, Plasters and Masons Union. When he gets here will be presented with an engraved card attesting to the fact,

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Gildehaus, 3847 Graceland Ave.

GOTHAM HAILS FUERJSONOAY Nation’s Largest City in Grip of Excitement. Bu Ini ted Pres* NEW YORK. June 10.—New York will not get a glimpse of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh until Monday. ; but the Lindbergh excitement has seized upon the populace once more | and threatens during the coming week to turn the city topsy turvy. The nation's largest city has welcomed and feted many people in its time—armies, emperors and kings, swimmers, actors and heroes of all sorts. But from the viewpoint of four days before the welcome can i take place, it would seem that no j one in history, even going back to ' times of Caesar returning victorious to Rome, had there been such a party arranged for any one as Lindbergh is going to have in New York. LINDY’SN.Y. WELCOME ARRANGED WITH RADIO HEAF. WJZ To Share With WNTC —Parade at 11 A. M. Bu l nited Pres* NEW YORK, June 10.—Arrangements for broadcasting New York's | welcome to Col. Charles Lindbergh Monday were announced today by the National Broadcasting Company. The parade and welcome is to begin at 11 a. m.. Eastern daylight saving time, and to continue until 4 p. m. WEAF and WJZ of the National Broadcasting Company, and municipal station WNYC will share the broadcasting, together with an extensive hook-up through the East and Middle West. The official welcome by Mayor Walker will be broadcast from the city hall steps, as will the ceremony of placing a wreath on a Madison Square Park monument and the official welcome of New York State, with Governor Smith presiding. In Central Pai'k. MESSAGE TO LINDBERGH Governor Jackson Sends Indiana's Congratulations. Governor Jackson today sent the following message to Charles Lindbergh at Washington: “For Indiana. I extend congratulations on your wonderful accomplishment.” GRAY"worfsEE CHILD Refuses to Allow His Daughter Meeting in Death Cell. Bu i'nited Press OSSINING. N. Y„ June 10.— Henry Judd Gray, under sentence of deafh for the murder of Albert Snyder; has refused to see his daughter, Sing Sing prison attaches ' revealed today. Mrs. Ruth Brown Snyder, also under death sentence, refused several days ago to see her daughter.

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LINDY TO SEE HOME SHORE LATE TODAY Cruiser Memphis Bearing Paris Flight Hero Nears Virginia Capes. CONTACT ALREADY MADE Destroyer Meets Craft at Sea for News Film Transfer. Dll I nil and Pres* WASHINGTON, June 10.—America's great reception fa ’ol. Charles A. Lindbergh has stan Six destroyers and\ early 100 planes were on the high ocas, or preparing for an immediate start, to ; meet the cruiser Memphis, speeding the trans-oceanic flier home, j The Memphis is due off the Virginia j capes at 3 p. m. today, Indianapolis time. j Unfavorable wind kept the dirigible Los Angeles in its hangar at Lakehurst. N. J., today and naval officers said the plan to fly the airship to the Virginia capes to meet Lindbergh on the Memphis might have to be abandoned. The wind ; blew across the airfield, making it ' dangerous to move the Los Angeles out of the hangar. The emissaries of an enthusiastic nation are taking Colonel Lindbergh ! greetings and a foretaste of the | tumultous welcome which the capI ital has determined will exceed even i the tremendous ovations of Pans. ; Brussels and London. Extraordinary last-minute prepaj rations were made here today for I ceremonies to follow the landing of the blond, curly-haired youth at the navy yard between 11 and 12 a. m. Eastern standard time, to prevent disasters which observers of the European demonstrations have rci peatedly warned against. City Transformed This usually staid'capital city has been transformed into tut expectantly vociferous hordse or citizens, all anxiously discussing the best place to see their hero. “Lindy.” Windows everywhere bear “Lindy’' ! greetings and boys and young men are sien building replicas of "the | Spirit of St. Louis”—the flier's trans-oceanic airplane. Boys are i wearing “I’d fly with Lindy” caps. Organizations are %moring for opportunities to do Lindbergh honor, to claim his presence for ; “just a few minutes.” and harassed men walk the streets seeking tickets ' to the National Press Club, Minnesota Society and Missouri Society receptions to be held for him. Fear Throng’s Rush The capital will take Lindbergh to Its bosom, have no doubt. The only fear of auhtorities now is that j its 500,000 inhabitants, swelled by , an estimated 150,000 visitors from I Eastern States, may crush him in 1 its wild enthusiasm. Brig. Gen. S. D. Rockenbach, District of Columbia military commander. announced, however, that all precaution will be taken for safety, even to prohibiting the Lindbergh parade Saturday from paus- : ing in its march, for fear of the 1 possible rush. Indication that the entire country had followed the capital’s lead and i taken the youthful flier to its heart | was seen in more than 1,000.000 | greetings already at hand. Estimates of telegrams varied from i 50,000 to 250,000. Estimates of let- ; ters reached as high as 1,000,000. i about half of which are air mail and will be conveyed here by special planes today and tomorrow. The letters, filling several mail trucks, will be swung in behind the Lindbergh parade down Pennsylvania Ave. and formally “delivered” to him. It would take the flier several years to read them, if he tried, to. More than $5,000 in donations by enthusiasts is Included Jn the several sacks of registered mail, according to postal officials. BID AWARD HALT ASKED Township Advisory School Board Flics Petition Against Trustee. Petition for an injunction to prevent Vestal C. Davis. Wayne township trustee, from awarding contracts for erection of anew township school and repairs on another has been filed In Superior Court Four. E. J. Pedlow, Charles Davidson and Joseph Harbison, township advisory board members, are petitioners. TECH UNIT COMMENDED Corps Gets Honor for Sixth Straight Time. For the sixth consecutive tlrite, the Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit of Technical High School has been selected as the honor unit of the Fifth Corps army area, according to word received here by MaJ. Henry F. Schroeder. senior instructor at the school. The word came from the commanding officer of the area at Ft. Hayes, Columbus. Ohio. The honoi was based on the M*V 20 inspection.