Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1927 — Page 1

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SCRIP PS-HO WARD

‘MAMA’VOICES THREATS TO EXPOSE AIMEE / Red-Haired Evangelist and Mother to Battle It Out in Courts. MONEY GRAB CHARGED • Mrs. Kennedy Tosses Hints That Kidnaping Story Was Shy of Truth. Ru United Press LOS ANGELES, July 28.—Redhaired, comely Aimee Semple McPherson, whose business is religion of hard and fast tenets, and whose followers are legion, today faced possibility of another siege with the courts. “Mama” Kennedy, Mrs. McPherson’s mother, and aid in the work of Angelus Temple, made the threat because :he did not like the way her daughter had treated her. The older woman not only said she planned to take their difficulties to court, but she added the court might care to inquire further into the famous Carmel-By-the-Sea incident, which brought the woman evangelist national notoriety.

Hints at “Exposure” Mrs. Kennedy, herself, said she wanted to know what, if anything, her daughter had kept from her in accounting for her disappearance last year with a story of being kidnapped and carried into the desert. While Mrs. Kennedy has believed until recently that “Aimee told the truth,” she is beginning to wonder whether some of the circumstances of Mra. McPherson’s kidnapping story are not incongruous. At one time authorities charged Mrs. McPherson with living in a cottage at Carmel-By-the-Sea with Kenneth Ormiston, Temple radio operator, during the period of her absence from Los Angeles. The evaneglist legally was cleared of the charge, however. ' Break Is Complete This and other things have resulted in a misunderstanding between mother and daughter—a misunderstanding so complete that the two have refused to communicate with each other except through lawyers. A trivial argument between “Mother” Kennedy and “Sister” Aimee and officials of Angelus Temple was the beginning of the end. • Mrs. Kennedy charged her daughter with what might be called “double crossing.” The evangelist declared the breach is not between herself and her mother, but between her mother and church members. “She has tried to gain complete control of the temple by. dealing through a committee and at the same time pretending great friendliness toward me,” charged Mrs. Kennedy. Accepts Challenge "Affairs at the temple are in terrible shape,” Mrs. Kennedy said, in announcing that she would bring suit against Aimee. “Things never were worse there. Mrs. McPherson incited revolt against me when she was in the East, and invited me to ‘fight it out in court.’ I have accepted the challenge, will engage a lawyer and do just that.” “Mother” Kennedy returned from a business trip to face the crisis at Angelus Temple. Mrs. McPherson was sick in bed today. She was said to have collapsed following her mother’s declaration of war. “Mrs. McPherson acted in a very un-Christian manner,” the evangelist’s mother said very earnestly, and dryly added: “She has made misstatements of facts regarding me.” “She asks me to resign! To whom would I resign? She’s a trustee and I’m a trustee, and so we’re equals.” “Grab” Is Charged According to the evangelist’s mother, she was sent out of town so that her daughter could “grab the mail, grab all the funds and take away my share in controlling the temple.” Mrs. Kennedy’s statement is in direct opposition to that made by Mrs. McPherson, who Tuesday declared that her mother had not left the temple and would not, but that “with Christian love and understanding we will continue to direct the affairs of the temple together.” DRY SLEUTH IS CLEARED MaJ. August Heise Reinstated; Charged With Rough Methods. By United Press WASHINGTON, July 28.—Maj. August Heise, deputy prohibition administrator for New York City, has been exonerated of charges of using third degree methods to obtain a confession from a prisoner suspected of liquor law violation, Seymour Lowman, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, announced today. Heise has been reinstated in the service, but transferred from the N9w York post 1 o the job of special investigator, with headquarters at Washington, Lowman said.

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The Indianapolis Times Mostly cloudy, probably thunderstorms tonight and Friday. Considerably cooler Friday.

VOLUME 39—NUMBER 67

‘BROKE UP MY HOME/ SAYS SLEUTH WHO SLEW DRY AGENT

Pulpit to Resin B]> MONTICELLO, Ind., July 28. —Rev. William Lama nc e, evangelist is changing jobs—he will cease verbal blows on sin to direct the wallops of his prize fighting son, Billy. The minister has applied to the Indiana boxing commission to enter the son as a professional prizefighter.

G. 0. P. EDITORS USE SOFT PEDAL Program Carefully Designed to Prevent Discussion of Party Troubles. BY DAN M. KIDNEY Times Staff Correspondent LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 28.—A program carefully designed to keep public discussion of any of the recent troubles of the Republican party and G. O. P. office-holders from cropping out failed to keep members of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association from doing plenty of talking privately as they gathered for their midsummer meeting here today and Friday. The editors were agreed that their leaders would prevent, if possible, any discussion of recent developments. They were interested in indications that Henry W. Marshall, publisher of the Lafayette CourierJournal and rock-bound Watson Republican, was running the show. It was reported that friends of Frederick E. Schortemeier, secretary of State and candidate for Republican nomination for Governor had hoped to get him or a speaker for him a prominent place on the banquet program for Friday night, but that Marshall put his foot down and the toastmaster will operate under instructions to call all or none of the leading contenders. Schortemeier is expected at the meeting. Senators James E. Watson and Arthur R. Robinson, National Committeeman Joseph B. Kealing and State Chairman Clyde A. Walb are scheduled to be here Friday and speak Friday night. Dean Stanley M. Coulter of Purdue University will be the principal speaker. The editors will attend a reception at the Marshall residence this evening and visit the Marshall farm Friday.

TRAIN WRECKS TRUCK Two Men Escape; Say Signal Bell Not Working. A truck was demolished and two men narrowly escaped injury • death today on the Monon tra r 0 at Twenty-Fifth St., when, the men assert, the signal bell failed to work until they were in the path of a northbound freight train. Roy Cobbs, 47, of 2110 Broadway, driver of the truck for the Indianapolis Power and Light Cos., said he was half way across the fifteen tracks before the signal bell sounded and the watchman, Jerry O’Leary, 62, of 2964 McPherson Ave., shouted at him. Cobb said O’Leary’s shouts so disconcerted him that he killed his motor. He could not start the motor so he jumped to safety. Virgil Kehl, 1632 Shelby St., who was driving abreast of Cobb swerved his machine north, avoiding being struck by driving on the tracks along the train. MAY BUY YELLOW CABS Rapid Transit Operators Negotiate for Taxi Company. Bu United Press PHILADELPHIA, July 28.—A deal to purchase the Yellow Cab Company of Atlantic City for a sum in excess of $500,000 is about to be closed, it was reported here today. The prospective purchaser is Mitten Management, Inc., operator of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company. BROTHERS MAKE LAWS Two Pairs Sit is Georgia’s House of Representatives. Bu United Press ATLANTA, Ga., July 28.—1n the House of Representatives of the Georgia Assembly sit two pair of brothers. Hamilton and Hezzie McWhorter represent Oglethorpe and Bleckley counties respectively, while G. C. and J. H. Adams are the representatives of the neighboring counties of Newton and Walton. Needless to say they are all Democrats. Find Despondent Woman in Lake Bu United Press • NEWARK, Ohio, July 28.—Barbara Barrel t, 55, of Pittsburgh, missing since Monday, was found dead in Buckeye Lake today. Miss Barrett had been in poor health and had gone from her home in Pittsburgh to Buckeye Lake with her sister, Mies Jane Barrett, to recuperates

Story of Ambush First Told After Killing on Lonely Road. Bu United Press HAGERSTOWN, Md., July 28.—1n a stuffy little room at police headquarters here today Reginald E. Walters, under-cover prohibition officer, dictated the story of his fatal shooting of Hunter R. Stotler, a Federal dry agent, on a lonely mountain road near Boonsboro, Md., Tuesday night. John D. Pennington, prohibition administrator for this district, sat on one side of Walters and State’s Attorney Harper Ballentine was on the other. They were the only persons who heard the tale first-hand from beginning to end. Walters, naturally tall'and gaunt, appeared even more sallow today than usual. Finds Stotler With Wife Walters told the two men listening to his confession, that he had first seriously thought of killing Stotler about a week ago. Stotler, who was in charge of enforcement work in Washington County, was spending Sunday at the Walters home here. He had awakened Sunday morning, Walter said, to find the house unusually quiet. He got out of bed and tiptoed downstairs. He had suspected, he said, that Stotler had more than a friendship for his wife. A step creaked, Walter said, as he reached the foot of the staircase. Stotler and his wife started to talk fn the kitchen. He went Into the room, he skid and found evidences which somewhat confirmed his suspicions. Fears to “Disgrace Family” When he accused Stotler of intimacy with Mrs. Walters, the undercover man said, his chief pulled a letter from his pocket which accused Walters of being in league with bootleggers of the community. He waved it at him, Walters said, and cried: “Well, I’ve got this on you!” At first, Walters’ confession ran. he had considered killing Stotler and then shooting himself. But that, he decided after thinking it over, would “disgrace his family”—his wife, a stout, unattractive woman of middle age, and two small sons. Told Story of Ambush Walters said that the idea came to him suddenly just as he was about to climb back into the automobile after readjusting a coil on the engine. He said he drew his revolver and said to Stotler, who was sitting in the front seat: “I’m going to kill you, Stot. You broke up my home.” The other man reached for his own gun, Walters said, but too late. He went around to the rear of the machine then, he said, and fired several more shots into the car to make it appear that they had been attacked. He fired about fifteen more shots in the air, he said, and then getting in beside the dead agent, drove to Punkstown, where he first told the story of ambush.

TOLD FEW OF RICHES Recluse Confided Secret of Fortune to Close Friends. The secret of the $32,000 f6rtune found in the home of Mrs. Catherine Kennedy, 77, of 325 E. South St., after her death, was confided to a few close friends some time ago, according to Mrs. Florence Sharp, 416 E. South St. What is to be done with the money will be up to Probate Court. “Mrs. Kennedy used to beg me to come live with her,” said Mrs. Sharp. “She told me I didn’t know what she would do for me when she died. She often told me she had plenty of money but did not feel like cooking for herself.” Neighbors said that the aged recluse often begged fdbd, and picked up bits of wood from streets and nearby lumber yards for fuel. SWALLOWS $1,500 JEWEL But Woman Saves Another Valuable Ring From Burglars. By United Press BRISTOL, Va„ July 28.—Mrs. W. G. Davis popped two diamond rings in her mouth when burglars entered her home. They bound her and gagged her, and in the mix-up she swallowed one of them, valued at $1,500. They fled after ransacking her home. ,

CANADA DONS ITS BEST TO GREET PRINCE

BY MORRIS DE HAVEN TRACY United Press Staff Correspondent MONTREAL. July 28.—Washington and New York may have their Charles A. Lindbergh, but Canada is ready to take to its heart the Prince of Wales with all the warmth which the United States has shown in welcoming its airmen. On Saturday the Prince and Premier Stanley Baldwin of England, accompanied by Mrs. Baldwin and Prince George of England, will arrive in Quebec on the Canadian Pacific liner Express of Australia. The Baldwins will remain in Canada until Aug. 18. The Prince of Wales and his brother will stay

INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1927

Hot Trade Bu Time* Special GARY, Ind., July 28.—James Ahmed, Arabian, many generations of whose ancestors have braved the heat of deserts, is braving the heat of Gary’s steel industry and likes it. He has filed first papers in the process of becoming a naturalized American citizen.

SUBWAY TIE-UP STILLLOOMING New York Trains Running, but Row Not Over. By United Press NEW YORK, July 28.—Although subway and elevated trains continued to operate on full schedule, it became apparent today that the situation between employes and employers was more in the nature of an armistice than a settlement. “The trains are running,” is Mayor Walker’s only comment. But the dispute between leaders of the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employes and the Interborough Rapid Transit Company is still being waged. The Amalgamated claims it has won the right to enroll subway workmen while the I. R. T. heads take an opposing stand. However, the I. R. T. paid off the strikebreakers it had mobilized, and the possibility of an immediate strike became dim. Meanwhile detectives were seeking the person, believed to be an Insane crank sympathizing with subway employes, who placed a bomb in the East River tunnel an hour before the strike was due. Experts agreed that if the infernal machine had exploded the walls of the unnel might have burst, causing a frightful loss of life. STEALS 18,350 PENNIES Five Policemen Spend Two Hours After Capture Counting Loot. Bu United Press NEW YORK, July 28.—Steal the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves, runs the old copy book maxim, or does it? Anyway, three men were arrested early today carrying a bag containing 18,350 one-cent pieces out of a penny arcade in Brooklyn. Five patrolmen spent two hours counting the pennies to make sure that the amount represented was $183.50. DISCUSS POOR ASPHALT Two Rejected Carloads May Be Used for Patching. Discussion of the rejection by Park Engineer J. E. Perry of two car loads of asphalt from the United Asphalt Company, represented by Todd Young, Republican politician, was scheduled before the park board this afternoon. Perry reported that subsequent shipments have been acceptable and that the rejected material might be used, at lower price, for patching and for tennis cour-t surfacing. GOES THRU WINDSHIELD Child Escapes With Minor Scratches in Auto Accident. Mary Jane Hill, 7, of 2218 Bellefontaine St., was hurled through the windshield of an auto driven by W. N. Guilfoyle, 124 W. Thirteenth St., but escaped with only a scratched leg. The Guilfoyle auto is alleged to have run into a parked auto at Capitol Ave. and Indiana Ave., owned by Louis Cohen, 302 N. Capitol Ave. DROP FORD MAGAZINE Dealers Told to Quit Taking Orders for Dearborn Independent. Bu United Press DETROIT, July 28.—Ford Motor Company dealers have been ordered to discontinue taking subscriptions for the Dearborn Independent, it was announced officially today at the Dearborn experimental laboratory of the company. The order was described as the first step in Henry Ford’s program of reducing the famous publication to a house organ for distribution among his employes and dealers.

longer. No date for their departure has been set. Canada has made elaborate preparations for their entertainment. The premier and Mrs. Baldwin will visit such outposts of the dominion as Prince Edward Island, Pictou, far up on the Nova Scotian peninsula, and Banff, In the Canadian Rockies. For the Baldwins the trip is partly official and partly to give the busy premier of the British empire a chance for a little recreation. That is the reason for the scheduled extended stay at Barff. The princes will spend much

BRITISH DASH U. S. HOPES OF NAVYACCORD Washington Officials See New and Costly Ship Building Race. BLAME PUT ON LONDON Fate of Geneva Conference Expected to Be Known by Week-End. BY LUDWELL DENNY United Pres. SUB Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 28.—Officials here expect the Geneva naval conference to fail. They blame Great Britain. They anticipate big naval appropriations by the next Congress. ' The American proposal to limit naval strength by total tonnages of ship classes—which Britain accepted at the Washington conference and now rejects—is the only practicable limitation method, according to the Administration here. The reported policy of Sir Austen Chamberlain, British foreign minister, rejecting that method for limiting small cruisers, will break the Geneva conference if insisted upon by the British delegation, officials told the United Press today. If the British give the American plan a fair hearing, the conference still can be saved, they said. They explained that Great Britain and the United States, because of geographical conditions, have differing cruiser needs, which can be met only by fixing an equal total cruiser tonnage for both navies and allowing each to apportion its tonnage in large or small cruisers, according to its own needs. Fate to Be Known Soon BY HENRY WOOD United Press Stair Corresnondent GENEVA. July 28.—Outcome of the naval limitations conference is expected to be known before the end of the week. With the chief British delegates, W. C. Bridgeman and Lord Cecil, due back today after an absence of twelve days, the American and Japanese delegates were ready to hear the latest British proposal for solving the cruiser problem. The Americans and Japanese professed ignorance of Bridgeman’s plans and were disinclined to believe press reports of a cruiser compromise proposal by the British which would place cruisers into large and small categories. , American delegates indicated that they believe the ccnference would end by passing an innocuous resolution under which Great Britain, the United States and Japan would announce publicly a nonaggressive policy in naval construction between now and the expiration of the Washington treaty in 1931.

London Sees Solution BY CLIFFORD L. DAY United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, July 28.—A possible ending of the impasse at the naval limitations conference at Geneva was seen by London papers today in the suggestion of Sir Austen Chamberlain, British foreign secretary, that a temporary agreement on cruisers be reached at the conference. Concluding his speech before the House of Commons yesterday on the British cruiser policy, Chamberlain said there need be no difficulty in arriving at “a temporary agreement regarding the immediate future of cruiser building.” And then he added: “But the British empire cannot be asked to give such a temporary arrangement the appearance of an immutable principle which might be treated as a precedent.” v Taking the “temporary arrangement” idea as their text, the editorial writers of most of the morning newspapers today elaborated on the suggestion and generally approved it. 17 TOURISTS INJURED Brakes Fail and Auto Speeds Down Lookout Mountain. By United Press CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., July 28. —Seventeen persons were Injured on Lookout Mountain Thursday afternoon when a Ford truck in which they were riding coasted down the mountain and turned over.

time at the elder's ranch near Calgary, and may visit British Columbia. People are crowding into Quebec to receive the Prince and the premier on arrival. Premier Mackenzie King and Minister of Defense Colonel Ralston of Canada, and Premier Taschereau of Quebec are among the officials who will greet the party Saturday. On Sunday the party will come to Montreal by steamer for a round of official and private functions which will keep the party as busy as was Lindbergh in New York.

Entered au Becond-Class Matter at Postoffice, Ind‘anapoll

Coolidges at Wedding

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President and Mrs. Coolidge motored 66 miles to Newcastle, Wyo., to attend the wedding of Miss Dorothy Mondell (above) and Alexander W. Gregg, chief counsel of the Internal Revenue Bureau. The bride is the daughter of the Wyoming representative. Young Gregg recently won national note when he opposed sixteen attorneys in the Ford tax suit.

CALL MANAGER RULINGPARLEY Appeal May Re Taken From Judge’s Decision. Whether an appeal on Superior Judge William Dunlavy’s city mani ager ruling will be taken to the Supreme Court will be decided at a meeting today at the Columbia Club. The city manager policy committee, headed by Henry L. Dithmer, the election board and attorneys met to decide whether the fight will be carried to a higher court, according to Claude H. Anderson, I manager executive secretary. Dunlavy ruled in a friendly suit j Wednesday, holding the manager board could not hold an election of commissioners before the fall o' 1929. He issued a temporary order restraining the election board from holding the election as planned Nov. 8. Anderson called a meeting of ward organizers Friday at manager headquarters at 520 Illinois Bldg., to receive membership drive reports. Several new precinct workers have been added to the force conducting .the 100,000 membership drive. BURGLAR GETS 50 YEARS ‘Gentleman Crook’ Pleads Guilty to Jewel Theft. By United Press NEW YORK, July 28.—“ Boston Billy” Williams, "gentleman burglar,” was sentenced today to fifty years in the penitentiary for burglary and larceny. He was a second offender. Wililams, whose real name is Monohan, pleaded guilty to robbing the Jesse Livermore home on Long Island of SIOO,OOO in Jewelry. FLYING WARSHIPS OFF Huge Armored Plane Heads Toward Washington and Dayton. By United Press NEW YORK, July 28.—The United states army's first "flying battleship,” an armored Curtiss-Condor bombing plane, carrying six machine guns, left 'Mitchel Field today for Dayton, via Bolling Field, Washington. _ The giant plane, which has been undergoing tests here, will stop at Washington for an inspection by army air service officers and then proceed to Wilbur Wright Field, Dayton.

Tuesday the party leaves for Ottawa, where the Pmice of Wales will dedicate a memorial chamber in the new Canadian peace tower. From Ottawa the party goes to Brookville. Kingston and Toronto and a week from Sunday attends dedication of the new international bridge at Niagara Falls. After that the special train for the princes will go straight to Calgary. Premier Baldwin and Mrs. Baldwin will go to Banff for a week in the mountains and then will visit Winnipeg aftd return for a tour through Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick.

EAST TENTH ST. OPENJOR USE Completion of Paving at Belt Elevation Announced. Completion of the paving under the Belt Railroad elevation at Tenth St. this morning was announced by Paul Gray of the Marion County Construction Company. The street will be ready for traffic by 5 this afternoon, he said. Tenth St., one of the main east traffic arteries, has been closed at the elevation for two years while the- railroad was elevated and various delays held up the paving. The contractor started work on the paving less than two weeks ago, rushing the Job through in response to the Impatience of property owners who have agitated for the improvement since 1910. The Sherman-Emerson Civic League will hold a celebration at the subway Aug. 18. Dancing in the street, a band concert and speeches by league and city officials will be features.

RULES FORBUS LINES U. S. Judge Holds Independents Can’t Be Barred; The Union Traction Company of Indiana lost its fight against independent bus operators today when Federal Judge Robert Baltzell refused to issue an injunction which would have put the Independent lines out of business. Judge Baltzell ruled that the Independent bus lines were entitled to operate on lines out of Muncie in competition with the Union Traction company’s trains and busses. The ruling was another chapter in The war between the traction company and the bus lines. The traction company had sought to establish that its business was suffering as a result of the competition and that it had lost $25,000 over a certain period as a result. BERLIN HAS FLAPPERS Use of Lipstick, Powder Puffs Shock Older Generation. Bu United Press BERLIN, July 28.—The prevalent use of lipstick and powder-puffs among the younger generation, disclosed recently in a police court case at Bremen, has shocked the older generation of Germany. The shock has been Increased by discovery In a west-end high school of Berlin that nearly half the girl students in one class-room alone carried a complete equipment for cosmetics. The headmistress suddenly rounded up the schoolbags of her thirty-two pupils and found 12 lipsticks and 15 powder-puffs. None of the girls was over 16 years old. Hourly Temperatures ,6 a. m...... 71 10 a. m. 86 7 a. m. 73 11 a. m 89 8 a. m.....„ 78 12 (noon) ... 91 9a. m—m h 3 Ip. n

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REMY SEEKS NEW SET OF ■ STEVECHECKS Two Given to G. 0. P. StatQf Campaign Committee in 1924, Times Finds. MISS MEADE IS CALLEQ Former Dragon’s Aid Will Appear; Duncan Again Is Questioned. Steps to obtain possession of new set of D. C. Stephenson cancelled checks, located by The Indianapolis Times, were taken today by Prosecutor William H. Remy and Special Prosecutor John W. Holtsman. At least two of the checks wer* given as contributions to the Republican State campaign fund la 1924. Remy and Holtzman gave the grand Jury the word that The Times had conveyed the information about the checks to them and prepared tq issue a subpoena tor the checks. Meanwhile, the grand Jury spent a quiet morning, interviewing only one witness. State Representative Russell V. Duncan, in its continued inquiry into political corruption. The Jury adjourned until Friday morning. The checks, four or five of them, are held by the Indiana National Bank. Stephenson closed his account and never called for the checks. One to Willis Dye Frank D. Stalnaker, president of the bank, admitted the checks are at the bank. He declined to discuss the amounts and payees. Among the checks is one made to Willis Dye. Kokomo, as treasurer of the campaign fund committee of the Republican State Committee in 1924, for SI,OOO. signed by Stephenson. This check was converted into cash at the bank. Another of the checks is made to Dye in the same capacity, but the amount was not learned. It cleared through a Kokomo bank, It is not known definitely whether these contributions appear on tho campaign fund report of the ReJ publican State committee as contributions from the former grand dragon. Another of the checks was for ttis pay roll of Stephenson's staff in the elaborate headquarters he maintained in the Kresge Bldg. Transferred from Columbus The account, it was learned, started with $17,000 on a transfer of that sum from Stephenson’s depository in Columbus, Ohio. The monejt lasted about six weeks. It was on this account that Stephenson drew a check for sl,ooo* payable to the Republican State Committee, which The Times recently published. Miss Mildred Meade, former confidante of D. C. Btephenson. and a man named Hohl, were subpoenaed to appear before the grand Jury some time today, according to Holtaman, but they did not show up. * The prosecutors did not disclose who the man named Hohl is, no* What is his connection with the investigation. Johnson was out of the city today: His office reported he would return Friday. Deputy Prosecutor William H. Sheaffer, who has taken many trips in search of evidence for the Jury, was out of the city again today. He. too, Is expected back Friday. Confers With Judge Holtzman conferred with Criminal Judge James A. Collins for half , an hour before going to the Jury room. He said he Intended to leave on his vacation Saturday and desired to have an understanding upon some matters with the Judge. “No definite decision has been reached regarding adjournment of the Jury through August, scheduled for Friday,” said Holtzman. "It la almost certain, however, that tho Jury will remain in session. “The new material was presented to them Immediately, to acquaint them with It, so “they could make up their minds about adjournments ROTARIANS HEAR JAPE By Timet Special CRAWFORDSVILLB, Ind., July 28.—Arthur H. Sapp, r.ew president of Rotary International, addressed the Group 6 Rotary meeting here Tuesday, at whlclj several hundred members of club* In the group were present.

Where Is the Oil Case Jury? What happened to the men who acquitted Millionaire Edward Deheny, and former secretary Albert Fall, indicted with him? Did they all get rich? Did they get cushy Jobs? Or princely presents? Or new homes? Or fine autos? And all that sort of thing? On page one, section two. a fascinating story of wha happened to the pjqpabcn of uwiXanjpia to