Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1927 — Page 3

JUNE 22, 1927

32 SOLONS TO i FACE ELECTION i AGAIN IN 1928 r ______ Robinson of Indiana Among Those Whose Terms Will Come to End. NEW YORK, June 22.—Thirtytwo Senators will be fleeted next year and the fight t'or the control of Congress is expected to give added interest to the campaign. South Dakota, where President Coolidge is spending the summer, will not hold its Presidential primaries until May, because of the passage of anew act by the State Legislature. In former years the South Dakota primaries have been the first and were held in March. Seventeen of the forty-eight states, have direct primaries to elect delegates to national conventions in 1028, and in most cases to designate the state’s party preference among presidtntial candidates. These states are: March New Hampshire and North Dakota. April—Michigan, Wisconsin. Illinois, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Ohio. May—California. Maryland, Indiana, New Jersey, Oregon, West Virginia. South Dakota (formerly in March). . June—Florida. ■ Os the thirty-two states which elect United States Senators in 1928, twenty-six nominate candidates by direct primaries and six by conventions. Thirty-two Senators, including twenty-two Democrats, nine Republicans, of whom four are Progressives. and one Farmer-Lebor member automatically go out of office March 4, 1929. unless re-elected in November, 1928. The twenty-six states nominating by primaries follow, with the dates of the primaries and the present incumbents: April 4—Pennsylvania. Reed,.Republican. April 20 —Nebraska, Howell, Progressive Republican. May 7—Maryland, Bruce, Democrat. May B—lndiana, Robinson, Republican. May 15—New Jersey, Edwards, Democrat. May 29—West Virginia, Neely, Democrat. June s—Florida, Trammell, Democrat. June 18 —Maine, ‘Hale, Republican: Minnesota, Shipstead, FarmerLabor. June 27—North Dakota, Frazier, Progressive Republican. June 28—Texas, Mayfield, Democrat. July 17—Montana. Wheeler, Democrat. Aug. 2 Tennessee, McKellar,! J?emocrat. ■ Aug. 7—Missouri, Reed, Democrat: Virginia. Swanson, Democrat, i Aug. 14 —Ohio, Fess, Republican. Aug. 21 Mississippi, Stephens, 1 Democrat*; Wyoming, Kendrick, Democrat. Aug. 28 California, Johnson, Progressive Republican. Sept. 4—Nevada, Pittman. Democrat; Wisconsin, La Follette. Progressive Republican: Michigan, Ferris, Democrat. Sept. 11—Arizona, Ashurst. Democat; Washington, Dill. Democrat; t -rmont, Greene, Republican. Sept. 18—Massachusetts, Walsh, I mocrat. The six states vchich nominate £ material candidates by conveniens. together with the names of the incumbents, are: Rhode Island. Gerry, Democrat. Dates to be fixed by party committees: Delaware, Bayard, Democrat; New Mexico, Jones; Democrat; Utah, King, Democrat, and Connecticut, McLean, Republican.

RADIO BIBLE SCHOOL OPERATED IN CHICAGO | Moody Institute Sponsors Series Os Religious Programs. 8 1/ United Brets CHICAGO. June 21.—Listeners everywhere have come to take the broadcasting of sermons and religious services as a matter of course, but not so many are aware that a fcsystematic plan of country-wide re- 1 Pgious education is being accomplished by radio. One of the foremost sponsors of this movement is the Moody Bible i Institute here, a large interdenominational traninig school for pastors, missionaries and other religious workers. This “Radio School of the Bible” is better known to listeners, as Station WMBI. OFFER TAX ESSAY PRIZE Everett Sanders Contributes Indiana University Contest Fund. Bn Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, June 22.—Ever- . ett Sanders, secretary to President Coolidge, has given his commencement address fee of June 6 to Indiana University, his alma mater, to be used as prizes for the best thesis on "Indiana State Taxation.” A prize of SIOO a year for the next three years will be given the senior or junior preparing the best thesis on that subject. Sanders asked President William Lowe Bryan of the university to announce the prizes. MALE TRADITION FALLS Oxford Dramatists for First Time Include Girl in Play. Bit United Brest k OXFORD, England, June 22. Iftlan’s last uninvaded letreat at Oxford University has been penetrated by women students. For the first time, an undergraduate will play a part in a production of the university dramatic society. Hitherto feminine roles have been enacted by male students; but the society has advertised for a girl to play Miranda in its production of “The Tempest.” ,

Dock Workers Denim Is Disguise for Rich Toiler

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Fresh from the Sorbonne and Harvard, Antone de Maglaive, Jr., has a job as longshoreman on the New York docks. His fellow-workers, he says, arc a ‘fine set”—“they treat me as an equal.” And his blue denim disguise is proof even against best friends.

Son of Steamship Manager Is Working While Waiting for Harvard Degree. BY HORTENSE SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, June 22.—1 t isn’t j the least bit difficult to imagine 19-year-old Antoine de Malglaive, Jr., | dad in tennis flannels or dinner coat and creating a big stir among debuntantes of the season. For one thing, he's handsome. Fdr another, his family is wealthy ; and prominent. Again, he has a degree from the Sorbonue in Paris, and in a year or so he wiil finish a post-graduate course at Harvard. But instead of tennis flannels or dinner coat. Antoine de Malgluice, Jr., wears blue jeans. He is break- j ing into exclusive longshoreman so- j ciety on the New York docks of the French Line steamship company.! His father is the company’s New j York manager. Best Friends Pass Him By With his six feet and more of physique he looks so perfectly at home in overalls, toiling away at his truck-trunding, that his best friends pass him by on their to Europe and never guess. “No one sees the longshoreman,” he laughed. “They see merely a pair of strong arms guiding a truck, BRITISH MARINES SEND SUCCESSOR OF JIGGS Bulldog Mascot Will B* Star Passenger on Leviathan. Bu United Press NEW YORK, June 22.—Word comes from London that the Royal English Marines are send to America Private Paget, a pedigreed English bulldog, to succeed to the position of the late lamented Sergeant Major Jiggs, mascot of the United Corps. Private Paget wall be a star passenger on the Leviathan, due here early next week. A squad of marines will meet the mascot at the 1 pier, according it all due honors and j escorting it to Washington, thence, probably, to the marine station at Quantico, Va. BANKER IS BOUND OVER Frank Kenner, Columbia City, Faces s Embezzlement Charge. Frank E. Kenner, assistant cashier of the First National Bank at Columbia City, was bound over to the Federal grand jury on SIO,OOO bond Tuesday by United States Commissioner Fae W. Patrick after a hearing when he was formally charged with embezzlement. Kenner and Archie Smith, former cashier, were arrested in Chicago Monday. At a hearing there they were ordered removed to Indianapolis. Smith, however, was not returned Tuesday. Charges against the men are in connection with the bank's closing March 7. SHIPPERS OPTIMISTIC s, Close Convention Here With Forecast of Good Business. Shippers and railroad officials of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana returned to their homes today from the Ohio Valley Shippers Advisory Board sessison here Tuesday with an optimistic message. The Mississippi flood will not bring a period of business depression and the outlook is for a record business activity this fall, the board executive committee reported, v

or a strong back failing to crumple under a trunk. The individual himself is as impersonal as the gangplank or the whistle. It would be easy to lose John Barrymore himself here. “Just yesterday”—he mopped his forehead with his blue denim sleeve —“just yesterday a society woman and her daughter who often have entertained me in their Greenwich home came down to take the boat to Europe. “In my care they deposited a brave array of baggage. A followed them at a respectful distance, and thanked them for the tip they handed me. What a Bit of Denim Will Do “Some of my Harvard classmates, off for their inspection tour of the French cases, have allowed me to haul their golf sticks and tennis rackets. Girls who have danced with me trip past without giving me a tumble—they are not ritzing me, any of them. They merely are paying a tribute to the excellence of my disguise. “Certainly I would never have believed what just a few yards of denim would do.” De Malglaive works from 8 to 5, with often an extra hour from 7 to 8. On a heavy day he may collect $5 in tips beside his regular pay. What to do with his evenings is no problem. “If you want any inside dope on the life of the dock worker, you can take it from me most of them go to bed about 8 o'clock,” he volunteered. “Just spend a few days juggling freight and you will be convinced. Boon to the Perspective “It would do all college men a great deal of good to have a Jew months of hard labor In the summer—it does things to the perspective.” It was not at the suggestion of his father than De Malglaive, Jr., went to work, but his father approves highly of the idea, and if influence and pull had been needed to get the boy on the docks, his father would not have withheld it. De Malglaive and his roommate at Harvard, who are specializing in business methods, thought it would be interesting to give this honest toil idea a tryout. So the roommate is spending his summer month in a gasoline filling station. “We’re going to have a lot to tell each other in September,” he said. “And when we go into business, as we both expect to, we ought to know something about the laborer's point of view. “The fellows on the dock are mighty decent to me—treat me as one of them, as an equal. They are a fine set.”

$ C St. Louis __ and Return Children, 5 and under 12 year.—s2.so SUNDAY, JUNE 26 Train will leave Indianapolis 12:50 a. m.; arrive St. Louis 7:45 a. m. Returning leave St. Louis 5:00 p. m. op 10:00 p. m., same date. BASEBALL St. Louis vs. Pittsburgh (National League) Tickets and full particulars at City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle, phone MAIn 0330, and Union station, phone MAin 4567. BIG FOUR ROUTE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FATE OF NEGRO MINERS, STRIKE BREAKERS, HARD Torn From South, Cast Off in North, Victims Prove Problem. By WILLIAM S. LYTLE, JR.. Scripps-llottard Staff Correspondent PITTSBURGH. Pa., June 22. Pitiful victims of the 1927 coal strike are the southern Negroes, shipped into western Pennsylvania as strike-breakers, according to officials of the United Mine Workers of America. Philip Murray, mine workers, international vice president, has just completed a survey in which he estimates that the Pittsburgh Coal Company, leadqr of the iionunion movement in the Pittsburgh district has imported 55,000 Negroes in the past two years. The present strike began April 1, but the Pittsburgh Coal Company, the world’s largest bituminous company. opened its first nonunion mine in August, 1925. The company’s maximum mining force varies between 5,000 and 6,000 men. and more than hall are Negroes, according to Murray. , Tremendous Turnover The tremendous turn-over, which has seen 55,000 Negroes come and go from the company pits in two years—not to count thousands of white strike-breakers of all nationalities—indicates the seriousness of the problem, according to the union leader. Murray says the company has fom 3.500 to 4.000 Negroes in its working force today. The problem that should give serious concern to those who are interested both in the welfare of the Negroes and of the communities to which they have been shipped, according to Murray, is represented by the question, “where are the other 51.000 today?” Uprooted from his natural environment in the far South, carried into a strange northland and finally cast adrift without friends, money or job, the Negro strike-breaker becomes a pathetic figure, union officials say. Miserable Fate In many instances, the Negro strike-breaker is a happy-go-lucky wanderer who jumps at the chance of a long, free tram ride. He may not know that he is to work in a coal mine, or if he does, he may have no idea what vork is like in the dark caverns beneath the Pennsylvania hills. When the new recruit reaches the pit he-is apt to be frightened by the thought of the hundred-and-one accidents which may befall the “green” miner. About the same time the pit boss may conclude that the new miner cannot be adapted to his work, and the miner and his new employer part company by mutual consent. The wanderer finds himself a long way from the cotton fields, perhaps with wife and children He shivers through a bitter northern winter. Disease snatches him, for his constitution has not been adapted to the northern climate. If lucky, he straggles back home, or picks up a more or less permanent job here. If unlucky, he becomes a burden on charity and a potential menace to the community which unwillingly has received him.

BABES. GRAYBEARDS GO ‘BETTING BALMY’ British Town Goes Wild Over Wagering. Bu United Press MANSFIELD. England. June 22. An unexplained betting craze, that has infected men. women and children of all walks of life, has set in here. Hundreds of bookmakers are kept busy collecting the bets of apparently most of the 45,000 population. Hocseracing is the favorite hazard, but betting was almost as heavy over football, the season for w’hich has just closed. A boy of eight is reported to be one of the biggest winners in town. RAIL CO. WINS RULING Board of Tax Appeals Reverses Commissioner’s Action Reversing rulings of the internal revenue commissioner, the United States board of tax appeals has held that the Indianapolis Street Railway Company received no taxable income in the purchase of certain bonds that were Involved when the company consolidated with the Indianapolis Traction and Terminal Company in 1919. “The board heretofore has had occasion to consider this question and has held that the retirement by a corporation of its bonds at less than par does not result In taxable gain,” the opinion reads.

Winged Hoofs

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(NE.t Srrvicf. New Vork Bureau) Society equestrians were little on the ground at the annual horse show of the fashionable Huntington. Long Island. Lindberghing over the bars here < top to bottom) we have Diana Guest, on “Best Maid,” Henry von Rhau, on “Old Barrier" and Jean Regan on -The Firt.”

WORK TO MAKE TOUR Secretary to View Efforts on Behalf of Dam. Ru Time* S'prnal WASHINGTON, June 22.—Progress made by the special fact-find-ing committee appointed by Secretary of Interior Hubert Work to expedite passage of Boulder Dam legislation by the next Congress will be reviewed by that official during a special Western trip soon. Work announced today that he intends to leave Waslungton about July 15 on his annual inspection of reclamation projects and other Federal activities coming under jurisdiction of the Interior Department. The meeting with the five special advisers now investigating the Boulder Dam project probably will take place in Denver during the first week in August. From Denver Secretary Work will swing northwest into Wyoming and Montana to inspect irrigation projects there. The secretary indicated he will spend some time witn President Coolidge in the Black Hills. NATURALISTS OFF ON BAFFIN ISLAND TOUR Austin Expendition Will Study Life Along Coast 7?f/ t lilted Prc*a NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y„ June 22. —Members of the Austin Natural History Expedition have sailed from New Rochelle aboard the fif-teen-ton auxiliary motored schooner Ariel, owned by Dr. Oliver L. Austin of Tuckahoe, for the eastern coast of Baffin Land in search of birds, small mammals and Insects, and to take motion pictures of the domestic life of birds. The party under'-the direction of Oliver L. Austin, Jr.*, of the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, will make its first stop at Providencetown, Mass., leaving there for Curling, N. F.; thence to Battle Harbor, Labrador then to Nain, Labrador, and through the Straits of Belle Isle along the eastern coast of Baffin Land. SIO.OOO for Horse Troughs NEW YORK, June 22.—'Women’s League for Animals, Inc., lias received an anonymous gift of SIO,OOO with a letter asking that the money be used in starting a fund to support free watering stations for horses, to be known as the “Helen Adams Fund.”

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Oratory of 11 -Year-Old Boy Clears His Father

Chauffeur, Represented at Traffic Court by Son, Freed of Charge. Bu l niled Prctl NEW YORK. June 22.—As the crowd in traffic court observed. William McCafferoy, 11, is one of those boys with a wide grin and straight hair that won’t stay parted, and will stick up behind and defy convention around the forehead. Patrolman Kelly shouted the name of Joseph McCafferoy, charged with driving on the wrong side of the street. “Mr. McCafferoy is not here,” piped a voice in the rear, “but he is represented.” A policeman lifted William above the heads of the crowd so Magistrate Glatzmeyer could see him. “Now, wrhat is your story?” demanded the magistrate. “My father is a chauffeur,” William said, after taking a long breath which never ran out until he finished, "and if he loses a day’s work it makes it bad for him. The patrolman caught him on the wrong side of the street on Father's day, so I said I would come down for him. “I have to miss school, but that ;s not so important. My father was on the wrong side of the street, but it was the first time he ever was and he will never do it again.” The crowd apulaudcd and Magistrate Glatzmeyer said: “Tell your father that his son's oratory has cleared him.”

Fat n Happy! Thirty Big Boys. All n ver 300 Pounds- Jine and Drink 20 Gallons of Wine.

Ru United Pres* MILAN, June 22.—More than 8 400 pounds of human flesh sat around the banquet table of 30 persons at the annual fat men's feast here. More than 300 pounds of food were consumed, or an average of ten pounds each. Ccsare Ramorini, who weighs 362 pounds, presided at the while the vice-presidential chair was taken by Signor De Rosa, who turns the scale at 302 pounds. The guests had to show a properly authenticated weight ticket issued on the day of the banquet, proving their capacity to turn the scale at 210 pounds or over. One man who was a few pounds under weight was admitted through the intervention of the president, after showing that his loss of weight was due to an attack of fever, from which he had just recovered The fat men displayed excellent appetites, and in the 300 pounds consumed were 81 plates of spaghetti. 17 chickens, four ox tongues, 54 pounds of asparagus, and 20 pounds of strawberries. More than 20 gallons of wine were drunk. During the feast, the orchestra placed “FalstafT.” A quiet harmony reigned, and there was only one speech by the president, who put forward the theory that stoutness, far from being a drawback to human beings, is the only happy and philosophic state. Fat men, he declared, are the wisest and most contented of mortals. They never worry, and their pleasantly accumulated adipose tissue acts, he stated, as a physical and moral buffer against all the troubles of life. The fat men present at the banquet grinned their approval of the president's words, and ordered a £ew more gallons of wine. MORE WOMEN TOURISTS Steamer Manager Reports Increase in Number Going Abroad Bu I’imcs Special NEW YORK, June 22.—Harold P. Borer, general passenger manager of the Cunard Line, announces more women and girls are crossing the Atlantic year after year. He said the preponderance of women passengers was very noticeable at this port. “From 60 to 65 per cent of our passengers are women and girls,” he said. “On some of the sailings the percentage is higher. This, I think, is a remarkable feature of the year.” Claycombe Rites Thursday Funeral services for Mrs. V. E. Claycombe, 61, mother of Lloyd D. Claycombe, Indianapolis, State representative, will be held Thursday at Marengo, Ind. She died Tuesday at her home at Jasper, Ind., and is survived by her husband and son.

LOAN BUSINESS GOOD New Foreign Financing Record May Be Set, Bu Timm Special WASHINGTON, June Sam's foreign loan business may establish an all-time world's record this month. Officials of the Commerce Department today dispelled the notion that the sharp decline of United States loans abroaty in May was a 1 precursor of the time when a crops | of high pressure salesmen would i have to be dispatched throught the J world to appeal for credit customers. ; Foreign loans placed in this! country in May, according to the department, were only about $43.000,000. a drop of over $150,000,000 from the total of $209,000,000 in April. The April total was greater than that for any previous month. Commerce Department officials | predict, however, that the total of foreign loans in June will approximate that in April and may exceed it. STORMS HOLD UP BYRD FROM OCEANIC FLIGHT Names Fourth Man of Crew for Paris and Back Dash. Bu United Pres* ROOSEVELT FIELD. I*. Y., June 22.—Storms prevented the America s departure for Europe again today, and Commander Richard E. Byrd planned to take advantage of the delay to receive another college degree—his third within the week. Yale will make the commander a Master of Arts at its commencement exercises this afternoon. Byrd was to return to Roosevelt Field in the late afternoon in time to take off for Paris, should the weather clear by then. Bernt Balchen. Norwegian, was definitely announced as the fourth man for the trip. Byrd has officially sworn in as an air mail pilot. Lieut. George O. Noville, Bert Acosta and Balchen all said they were ready to, leave on short notice. PRINCESS MAY RIVAL WALES AT CHARLESTON Queen Marys Granddaughter Practices Rudimentary Steps. Bu In it'd Press LONDON, June 22. Princess Elizabeth. Queen Mary's one-year-old granddaughter, not only has increased her long distance walking record, but seems to be practicing a rudimentary Charleston in her spare time. The dance she essays when the gramophone in her nursery is playing strongly resembles the Charleston at which the Prince of Wale*, has become adept. The Princess's walking progress Is restricted to a schedule laid out by Quqen Marie. Most of her pedestrian practice is done in reins, so that the chances of fall on her royal nose arc minimized. Queen Mary bought the reins herself at a charity bazaar.

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LIBERALS WILL CONTINUE FIGHT IN CALIFORNIA Repeal of Syndicalism Law and Release of I. W. W. Convicts Demanded. Bv MAX STERN „ SAN FRANCISCO, June 22. California Liberais, celebrating the pardon of Miss Anita Whitney, were preparing to make their victory complete by three more steps. These were: 1. Organization of the State behind the national movement for the pardon of Sacco and Vanzetti, urging upon Massachusetts the same spirit that inspired Governor C. C. Young’s act of clemency. 2. A general amnesty for the other California victims of the State criminal syndicalism law, the seven I. W. W.'s still serving in San Quentin and Folsom. Seek Law Repeal 3. Preparations for a State-wide campaign for the repeal of the law. under which Miss Whitney and 163 other radicals were convicted the post-war red scare. The Civil Liberties Union, which led the Whitney pardon car.paign, has issued a statement jaudatory of Governor Young's action. It believes, howvr, with a woman of •’ter caliber barely saved from a felon's cell, free speech is still in jeopardy until the “C. S.” law is repealed. Furthermore, it sees no reason why the seven friendless, imskUl^ V fii-ko! vi' turn ed ui'der nnd no quilty of oAMREI should not. be given liemcWfßrS Two Ex-Scrvice Men Os the seven I. W. W.'s, five in San Quentin and two in Folsom) All are young, unmarried and of the great class of migratory toilers which California industry requires for its seasonal work. Two are exservice men. All were sent up from small interior towns in 1924 or before All were convicted of mere membership in the I. W. W. The first to come out will be William Bryant, young lumberjack, sent up from Eureka in 1923, due for release July 16. The last will be Leo Ellis, serving in Folsom from Stockton until 1931. TEXANS TO SEE GOTHAM Governor Moody Heads Good Will Delegation on Tour. Du I'niUd Press NEW YORK, June 22—The Texan “good will" delegation, headed by Governor Dan Moody and consisting of 120 representatives of the Lone Star State, will 'arrive in New' York by special train Tuesday. June 28, for a two-day visit. The party has left Dallas, its first stop being Kansas City, then going to St. Louis. Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo and Boston. After the stay in New York the delegation will stop at Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati and Memphis on the way back. The return is scheduled for July 4.

OF course you’re tired of all the extra cleaning that is necessary during the sufnmer months, when wide-opened windows invite all the outdoor dust. Os course you begrudge more than ever—on these beautiful summer days—the extra time that this cleaning takes. Let