Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 137, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1927 — Page 3

OCT. 17, 1927

LEVINE HOME TO LAUNCH ATLANTIC AIR MAIL SERVICE,

WHISTLES TOOT NOISY GREETING TO NEW YORK Mayor Walker to Extend Welcome in Ceremony at City Hall. PLANS WESTWARD HOP Ocean Postal Service Will Start Operation Within Next 2 Years. fii United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 17.—New York, which has paid the tribute of hero worship to Lindbergh, Byrd and the other air pioneers, had a chance to greet the first trans-Atlantic flight passenger today when Charles A. Levine came home. Grover Whalen headed the customary reception committee on the municipal boat Maccm, which tool: ' Levine off the Leviathan, but only & few hundred gathered in the mist at the Battery to see the man who eluded his wife’s grasp and, hatless, stole aboard the Columbia when Clarence D. Chamberlin took it on a non-stop flight to Europe. Levine, who in the four months since the Columbia started from ' Roosevelt Field has toured the capitals of Europe, where he was received by the pope, Premier Mussolini and other notables, wore his laurels modestly. Mayor to Extend Greeting Next year, he said, he hopes to go to Europe and be a passenger on the first successful western flight. Whistles tooted in the bay as Levine was taken aboard the Macom, where his wife and daughter, Eloise, P, greeted him. There was no parade when the party landed at the Battery, but after a short rest uptown, Levine will be received at the city hall by Mayor James J. Walker. The proceedings will be broadcast from the municipal council chamber. The 37-year-old business man who built a fortune on salvage materials during the war, was enthusiastic when he told of his plans of the future. He said two European pilots were on their way to this country now to cooperate with him and with American engineers in building planes for regular transAtlantic air mail service. Carry Crew of Four The planes will carry four men. A navigator, two pilots and a radio •operator will manage the sevenmotor equipment, which wil\ include all the latest developments in aviation and wireless. Os the seven motors, two will be kept in reserve. The wing spread bf the proposed airship will be 180 feet, while the weight will be gross PO.OOO pounds. Os this 10,000 will be given to letters. The cost of the planes will be half a million dollars each. They will be American built and will be in operaiton in two years, if the present plans are carried out. Forty-hour mail service to Europe is proposed, and the postage will pe about 50 cents a letter. Minimizes Air Risks When Mrs. Levine confided to her husband that she was going to take up flying, he said: “Everyone should fly. There’s no more risk in an airplane than in an . automobile.” Levine was questioned on a report . |hat he had said he was not a Jew. He only smiled and asked, “How bould I do that?” “I was born in North Adams, Mass., on St. Patrick’s day. And when I got a letter from a woman In Ireland asking if I were Irish, I told her that being born on St. Patrick’s day was as near as I came.” The flier said he had carloads of ' letters that he had not had time to {Dpen. Fly Back, Late Year “I would rather have flown back to the United States, but the iweather reports prevented that this year. -Next year I hope to go to Europe and fly the famous westward route.” The Columbia will be brought back to this country on the Italian Liner Roma, Levine said. “I certainly plan to get a pilot’s license,” he continued. ‘Than I can i go where and when I please. The biggest kick I got of the whole time I was in Europe was when I flew from Le Bourget to Croydon.” After the reception at the City Hall, Levine will go to his home in the Rockaways, where an evening reception is scheduled. * CONVENTION TO GOSHEN I?,w United Press BLUFFTON, Ind., Oct. 17.—The Men’s "Congress of the Ft. Wayne classis of Reformed Churches will • meet in Goshen in 1928, it was decided here Sunday at this year’s session. Maj. W. B. Hand, Culver, was flamed president. Other officers chosen were: Cliffton E. Stryker, Berne, vice president; Dr. Nevin Bretz, Goshen. Secretary, and Richard E. Hughs, Bluffton, treasurer. Judge William H. Schannon, Ft. , Wayne, the retiring president, presided at the meeting. *

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Hundreds Pay Honors to Crash Victims

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Scene outside Shirley Brothers mortuary, 946 N. Illinois St., where 1,200 persons, the largest audience ever assembled there, gathered this morning to pay respects to four of the victims in the Grotto crossing tragedy. Those’fbr whom Christian Science services were held were Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Meredith, Von Weber Glascock and Miss Margaret Pauley.

REMUS PLANS PLOHEFENSE Attorney Seeks to Take Depositions in 10 Cities. Bu United Press CINCINNATI, Ohio, Oct. 17.—Affidavits to support his request to take depositions in ten cities, to be used in the defense of George Remus, charged with murdering his wife, were being prepared today by Charles H. Elston, attorney, whom Remus employed to aid him in his defense. Each affidavit will set out, on orders of Judge Chester R. Shook, what each of the many witnesses is expected to say in the depositions. Requests for these depositions was filed Saturday when Remus was arraigned and pleaded not guilty to the ipurder charge. Remus, making a plea to Judge Shook for the taking of the affidavits, said they would show that his wife and Franklin L. Dodge, former prohibition ace, conspired for his imprisonment to Atlanta Penitentiary for two years on a liquor charge, conspired to get all his wealth, and even employed gunmen to kill him. Whether the depositions will be allowed to be taken will be decided by Judge Shook, probably today. DENY AMNESIA STORY Robert Mitchell’s Relatives Declare Hd' Has Been in Richmond Hospital. Bw United Press MOSCOW, Ind., Oct. 17.—Relatives of Robert Mitchell today denied widespread reports that Mitchell has been found at Brazil, Ind., after a lapse of memory which had taken him from his home and relatives twenty-seven years ago. The version of his absence for many years has been greatly exaggerated, the relatives declare. They state that his whereabouts was known to the family until a week or so ago, when he made his escape from the Easthaven Hospital at Richmond, where he had been taking treatment for insanity during the twenty-one years. Arrangements have been made to take Mitchell back to the hospital, and not to return him here, as has been reported. NURSING HEAD NAMED Hazel Deupree Gets William Coleman Hospital Post. Miss Hazel Deupree, R. N., Arsenal Technical High School nurse, will head the nursing staff at the new William H. Coleman Hospital for women, Robert E. Neff, administrator, announced. Besides her duties as superintendent of nurses, she will be an instructor at Indiana University nurses’ training school, whose students will have experience in the new hospital as well as the Robert W. Long and James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for children. All are affiliated with the Indiana University School of Medicine. Formal opening of the Coleman hospital is set for Thursday.

BOY’S FUNERAL TUESDAY Funeral services will be held at 1:45 p. m. Tuesday for Dean Franklin Ewbank, 17, of 3456 Salem St., son of Richard L. Ewbank, Indianapolis attorney, who died Saturday after several month’s illness. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Dean Ewbank was graduated from Shortridge High School in June, 1927, and planned to enter De Pauw University this fall. He is survived by his father, a sister, Miss Gladys Ewbank, and two brothers, John and Albert Ewbank. He was a member of the Y. M. C. A. and the National Honor Society, high school scholastic organization. Lutherans to Meet Bn Times Svccial EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 17.—The Indiana Synod of the Lutheran Church in America will convene here Tuesday for a three-days session. Formation of anew synod to be known as the Kentucky-Tennes* see synod will be considered. Churches in these States are now a part of the Indiana synod. Left $158,396.78 Estate COLUMBUS, Ind., Oct. 17.—The late Francis J. Crump, local capitalist and president of the First National bank at the time of his death several months ago, left an estate valued at $158,396.78, according to an inheritance appraisement which has just been filed here.

BLUE GOOSE TO INITIATE Winners of Golf Tourney Will Be Announced Tonight. Winners in the Indiana Blue Goose Society golf tournament held last week at the Meridian Hills course will be announced tonight at a meeting at the Columbia Club. About sixty members competed.

DEATH TAKES DOCTOR Dr. Johnson Was Insurance Firm Official. Dr. Andrew Johnson, 67, of 1864 N. Pennsylvania St., died Sunday at his home following a year’s illness and an attack of heart disease. He had been critically ill about a week. Dr. Johnson was born in Sweden, April 2, 1860 . He came to America with his parents when he was 10. They first lived at Moline, HU and later moved to Swedeholn, Neb. Dr. Johnson was educated at Luther College, Augustana College, and the University of Nebraska. He married Miss Sophia Sandahl, Nov. 20, 1890. He was a physician for the Union Pacific Railroad and medical director for several State institutions and practiced as a physician for thirty years. In 1919 he became niedical director of the International Life and Trust Company, Moline, 111. Dr. Johnson came to Indianapolis in March, 1927, as vice president and medical director for the Crescent Life Insurance Company. He was a member of Zion Lutheran Church. Surviving are the widow; one son, Dr. Julius Johnson, Omaha, Neb.; a daughter, Mrs. Olga Miller, Canton, 111.; a brother, O. A. Johnson, Axtell, Neb., and a sister, Mrs. Christena Swanson, Swedeholm, Neb. Funeral arrangements will be completed when Dr. Johnson arrives from Omaha. Burial will be in Omaha. ~

BANDIT GETS S2OO Lone Man Orders Grocer and Customers to Floor. Walking into the Piggly Wiggly grocery, 5148 College Ave., with other early morning customers today, a lone bandit ordered William Mills, 2611 E. Seventeenth St., manager; C. Holsapple, 418 N. Oakland Ave., butcher; James Barr, 14, of 5150 Central Ave., and a small boy, both customers, to sit down on the floor. Turning to Mills he demanded to know wher? the Saturday receipts were. He book the sack and S2OO contents and fled. No one saw which way he ran or whether he had an auto. CRACKSMEN THWARTED Safe robbers pried open the outer door of the safe at the Miller Sand-wich-Shop, 16 E. Washington St., but failed to get $1,400 in an inner compartment. John Kennybrook, manager, reported he found the rear door open and the outer door of the safe ripped off and battered when he opened the store.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Alford Lammer, 938 Chadwick St., Ford, from Riverside Park. Miller Burns, 713 S. Illinois St., Nash, 577, from 811 S. Illinois St. C. H. Hall, Alexandria, Ind., Buick, 391-999, from there. Allen Stout, 1220 N. Illinois St., Ford, from Georgia and Illinois St. Charles W. Schaffer, Martinsville, Ind., Ford, from Capitol Ave. and Washington St.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Sam Goblinger, 1309 N. Pennsylvania St., Ford, found at Chadwick and Ray Sts. Ford coupe, 566-086, at 551 W. Washington St. Dale T. Evans, 214 N. Temple Ave., Chevrolet, at Raymond and Shelby Sts. Chevrolet, no license plates, at 412 Caven St. Maxwell touring, at Maple and Wilkins Sts. Lincoln Garage, 38 Kentucky Ave., Ford, at Marion St. and Oliver Ave. Wayne Stewart, Martinsville, Ind., Ford, at Bluff and Southern Aves.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HURRICANE IS ON WAYNORTH Shipping in West Indies and Bahama Waters Warned. Bin United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.—The United States weather bureau today ordered hurricane warnings posted for a tropical disturbance central at about latitude 18, longitude 85, apparently moving slowly northeastward. Caution has been advised for shipping in Cuban waters, especially off the south coast and in the Florida straits and southern Bahamas during the next twenty-four hours. The steamship Tela, in latitude 17, longitude 86, at 9 o'clock last night, reported encountering the disturbance with a wind from the west of forty-two miles an hour velocity, accompanied by rain. This is the only ship report on the storm which has been received so far, the weather bureau said. Pressure is relatively low off the middle and south Atlantic coasts, it was said.

ORDER SANITY PROBE Physicians to Examine Firer of Three Churches. Criminal Court Judge James A. Collins today named two doctors to inquire into the sanity of Maurice De La Tour, "firebug,” who has confessed To firing three Indianapolis Catholic churches in June. Drs. Herbert Wagner and Frank T. Dowd were instructed to report on De La Tour’s sanity Saturday. If they find him sane, a date for his trial on arson and habitual criminal charges will be set. If found insane probably he will be sent to the Indiana Hospital for Criminal Insane at Michigan City. Although, according to detectives, he has admitted firing St. Patrick’s, St. Joan of Arc and Our Lady of Lourdes Churches, De La Tour pleaded not guilty. St. Patrick’s Church was destroyed, with about SIOO,OOO damage.

CREWS OF SINKING AND BLAZING SHIPS RESCUED T vo Vessels Reported Going Down; Another Afire at Sea. Ru United Press GIBRALTAR, Oct. 17.—SOS messages today reported the United States shipping board steamer Nile, 6,868 tons, to be sinking ten miles west of Cape Bopgaroni. The crew was safe, the Nile reported in its last message. NEW YORK, Oct. 17.—The entire crew of the steamer Flower Dew, reported afire 400 miles off Savannah, Ga., Saturday night, was rescued by the steamer Santa Veronica, the Independent Wireless Company is advisSd. WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.—The coast guard cutter Mascoutin has rescued the crew of the schooner Morris Thurlow, which had broken up on Diamond Shoals off the North Carolina coast in a gale. BREWS IN HOTHOUSE \ Distillery Found in Operation Among Fragrant Flowers. Among the fragrant flowers of a hot house, at 200 Habig Rd., Saturday night, police and Federal officers found a thriving brewery. Twenty-five gallon? were in the process, and ninty-five quarts were bottled. In addition police found ten gallons of wine. James Boswell, 59, of R. R. 5 was charged with operating a blind tiger, and when he told that Jack Tillison, 32, same address was the proprietor, Tillison also was arrested. The Tiliison arrested was not Jack Tilson, musician, who lives a mile away from the Boswell place. BOY OF 10 KILLS SELF Bn United Press CENTAUR, Mo., Oct. 17—M>’~" ing “I’ve Just got to kill myself,’* George Burton, IC-year-o. .i . boy, placed his father's reled shotgun between his knees, rested the muzzle against his heact, and discharged the weapon by poking the trigger with a broomstick. Mr. and Mrs. Willaim Burton, parents of the boy, told authorities they knew of no reason for the suicide.,

OPEN FIGHT ON KLAN, DRYS IN G,O P.AFFAIRS Influences Are Denounced Bitterly by A. G. Graham at South Bend. 9 Bu United Press SOUTH BEND, Oct. 17.—That a fight for control of the Republican party will be waged between those who demand that it drive out the Anti-Saloon League and the KuKlux Klan from all influence and thbse who wish to control it in the interests of these organizations was made certain Saturday night, when A. G. Graham delivered a bitter denunciation of these organizations at a meeting of Thirteenth District Republicans. Graham, a candidate in the primaries against Senator Arthur Robinson, was not on the list of invited speakers. Those who had arranged the meeting had invited speakers from other States in an effort to avoid any mention of the present scandals in Indiana. Ignores Soft Pedal The pedal was down until Grantham arose and declared: “The party of Lincoln has no place in its or. ganlzation for the Ku-Klux Klan, with its doctrine of hate, or for the Anti-Saloon League, whose fanaticism has gone so far as to attempt to terrorize our courts after it has dictated to legislatures and executives. " . “The Republican party was created in the name of liberty. It must remain the party of liberty. For it to cgter to these influences which are destroying representative government, for it to welcome them | and trade with them, is to desert the | cause of freedom. Cheers and Hisses The party of Lincoln never can be turned over to Shumaker or to Hiram Wesley Evans. There were cheers and hisses. Two ministers arose to protest that the Anti-Saloon League is the legitimate protector of law and order and that any party which dared defy it or its leadership would go down to defeat. Graham announced that he would continue to fight and that a defeated party would be better than a> victorious one which has surrendered its birthright. Among the other parts of his speech which caused consternation and comment was this reference to Judges Martin and Gemmell of the Supreme Court: “Now„sneaking of prejudice: In Mr. Shumaker’s contempt case two judges dissented to the opinion. I was in the convention of 1924 when these two men were nominated. They were indorsed and chosen by the Klan and the League and what was there of the Republican party. “I think they were honest in their dissenting opinion, but the reason? for dissenting on the ground of prejudice is there. “When outside organizations let it be known tl.’* they are endeavoring to select some judges and to defeat others, the effect is intimidation. Apply all the rules and writings of able, honest lawyers and judges and of all subtle things that go to undermine our government; any mob conduct that tends to make a Pontius Pilate of our courts is the worst.”

BRITISH SCIENTIST TO OPEN LECTURE SERIES Bertrand Russell Is First on Jewish Community Center Program. Bertrand Russell, world famous English scientist and philosopher, will open the second annual open forum lecture series at Kirshbaum Community Center, 2314 N. Meridian St., Nov. 6. The first lectures and open discussions were held last year under auspices of the Jewish Community Center Association. They paqked the auditorium and this year they will be held in the new building, recently completed. Russell’s subject will be “Education and World Peace.” Others on this season’s program include Lewis Browne, author of “This Believing World”; Dr. Bruno Roselli, Vassar Italian department head; Dr. Solomon Freehof, Chicago rabbi; Upton Close, Norman Angell, and Dr. I. M- Rubinow. J. L. Mueller is chairman.

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(NEA Service. New York Bureau.) Our camera caught Mrs. George Haldeman at her New York hotel in the act of reading the cable’s assurance of the safety of her husband and Ruth Elder after their New York-to-Paris monoplane American Girl was forced down near the Azores. She’ll have a long wait, though, before he makes his way back home by steamer.

SCOUTS GIVEN CABIN Structure Is Dedicated at Ceremony Sunday. Dedication ceremonies for the recently completed cabin on the Boy Scout reservation were held Sunday by the parents’ council of Troop 82. Mrs. P. C. Reilly is president of the council. A chicken dinner, prepared by women of the North Park Christian Church, was served to more than eighty persons. Seven scout executives were introduced. They were F. O. Belzer, scout head; Almus G. Ruddell, chairman of the camp committee of the scout council; David P. Porterfield, scout' commissioner of the north side district; Edward W. C.ark, publisher of the Spectator, a community newspaper; Miss Stella Doeppers, scout office manager, and Harley Deems of Shenandoah, la. John G. Watson, former Scout master of Troop 82, who was killed Friday night in the Grotto accident, was honored. The Rev. J. A. Long, pastor of the North Park Christian Church, officially presented the cabin to the Scouts.

MRS. 0. J. CONRAD IS DEAD IN NEW YORK Body of Securities Man’s Wife to Be Brought Here for Burial, Mrs. O. J. Conrad, 43, of 3138 N. Meridian St., wife of Owen J. Conrad, president of the Continental Finance and Securities Company, died Saturday at Clifton Springs Sanitarium, Clifton Springs, N. Y. Mr. Conrad is in Clifton Springs and will return the body here for the funeral. Arrangements will be made Tuesday. Mrs. Conrad, born in Paris, 111., was an Indianapolis resident for twenty-five years. She was a graduate of the Girls’ Classical School and a student of violin under Hugh H. McGibeny of the Metropolitan School of Music. WARD IN REMUS TRIAL Dry Deputy, Claypool Men Also Made Witnesses. Albert S. YVard, United States district attorney, and George L. Winkler, deputy dry administrator, •re among witnesses listed by George Remus for his trial for murder, according to Cincinnati dispatches. Other Indiana witnesses include Ansel R. Harris, former prohibition administrator for Indiana, and attaches of the Claypool Hotel, where Remus lived while on trial here, dispatches stated.

OPEN ORATORY TESTS Contests on Peace Subject to Start Nov. 1. School officials and pastors throughout the State have been invited by the Indiana Council on International Relations to hold preliminary contests in the first annual way of peace declamation tests. Competition will start Nov. 1. To point out the futility of war and ways to prevent it is the purpose of the contests. Co-operating with the council are the Church Federation of Indianapolis, Y. M. C. A.. Indiana Council of Religious Education, Indiana Council of Jewish Women and the Indianapolis Y. W. C. A. Bronze medal contests will start Nov. 1, and continue until Dec. I in local churches. County silver contests will be held on or before Jan. 1 and congressional gold medal contests on or before Feb. 1. The State contest with three grand cash prizes and scholarships will be held Feb. 22 in Indianapolis. Contests are open to boys and girls between ages of 14 and 19 years, no enrolled in any college course.

TWO HURT AS PLANE CRASHES NEAR BERNE Air Transport Official and Pilot In Hospital at Decatur. Bu Times Special DECATUR. Ind.. Oct. 17.—Two men are in Memorial Hospital here today suffering from severe injuries received Sunday when their plane made a forced landing and struck a tree near Berne. The injured are Harold Emmons. Detroit, Mich., National Air Transport Company director, and Lieut. J. J. Hopkins, Selfridge Field, Mich., pilot of the plane. Emmons has a compound fracture of the left leg, a broken nose, cuts and bruises. Hopkins has several lacerations on his hands and a severe cut on the nose. The pilot had picked Emmons up at Chicago, en route to. Detroit from Madison, Wis., where he had attended the Mich-igan-Wisconsin football game S vturday. Engine trouble caused the forced landing.

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TWELVE KILLED, VIOLENCE TOLL FOR WEEK-END One Slaying Included; Automobiles Take Heaviest Toll: Twelve violent deaths over the week end is the toll counted in Indiana today. Two of the fatalities, both caused by auto accidents, were in Indianapolis. Frank Stone, 28, Hartford City, was fatally shot by CharlesPaull during an argument said to have resulted when Stone accused Pauli of calling police to a home where Stone was a guest. Pauli says he shot in N self-defense. John Shively, 21, Marion, is dead at Ft. Wayne, victim of an auto accident in which a companion, Lawrence Mulliiora, was seriously injured after the two are aheged to have attacked three women. Driving in a city park at Ft. Wayne, the two men are said to have attempted to induce Mrs. Viola Newcomer, 29, and Mrs. Mazie Kidwell, 28, to enter their auto. When t.ha women refused, they say the men struck them, using a shotgun as a alufc Later the men are said to have struck Miss Bessie Falon, 21, who was on a hike with her, Sunday school glass of girls. She had refused to enter their car. Auto Rac*r Killed Arthur P- .am, 35. St. Louis, Mo., was killed instantly while driving in an auto race at the George Rogers Clark speedway three miles west of Vincennes, when his car overturned. There were two other accidents on the track, injuring two drivers—lra Hall, 35, Terre Haute, and Charles Crawford, 32, Terre Haute. The latter is in' a serious condition. Eugene Brown, 36, met instant death at Connersville when the auto he was driving was struck by a Baltimore & Ohio passenger train at a grade crossing. Dies Beneath Train C. E. Redford, 20, Los Angeles, Cal., was killed instantly at Terre Haute when run over by a Big Four freight train. He is believed to have stumbled and fallen beneath tile train while attempting to board It to steal a ride. Marshall Mabe, 33, Sikeston’ Mo., employed at the Southern Railway shops at Princeton, was crushed to death when run over by a traveling locomotive crane. William E. Ryan, real estate dealer at Gary, was killed there when the auto in which he was riding with his wife and daughter was 4 struck by an interurban car. Mrs Ryan suffered a skull fracture and the daughter, 4, has a badly mangled leg and internal injuries. Ted Bowers, 22, Bedford, was drowned when a boat capsized while he was on a fishing trip with his wife. The body has nob- been recovered. The man and wife attempted to change seats In the boat, causing it to overturn. Mrs. Bowers was rescued by Tilford Bair. Jessie Frazier, 26, South Bend, was fatally injured when the auto she was driving collided with another A Harvey Woodbury, carpenter, Union City, was crushed to death when a heavy elevator fell on him at a furniture factory where he was working. Lived in North Marion 84 Yean Bn Times Special MARION, ind., Oct. 17.—Wesley Bowman, 86, is dead at North Marion, where he had been a resident eighty-four years.

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