Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 155, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1927 — Page 2

PAGE 2

tlons of the United States has become a waste of broken houses, uprooted trees and washed out roads and railways. Hundreds of head of cattle have been drowned. In many places drowned cattle lie in heaps where the waters left them in re ceding. In nearby Barre, seven persons, including Lieutenant Governor Hollister Jackson, were drowned. At Waterbury the Red Cross reported that nineteen persons had lost their lives and that three were missing. 22 Dead in One Town Continuing up the Winooski River valley, at Bolton twenty-two persons are known to have perished and between ten and thirteen are missing. At Jonesville four persons were drowned. At North Buxbury, near Waterbury, twenty-five persons died. Four bodies were taken from the river at Richmond. Though handicapped by lack of supplies, local relief forces are struggling to alleviate the suffering of the homeless. Flurries of snow, carried down on a cold north wind, brought suffering to the hundreds of refugees in damager, heatless houses, or to those camped in tents along the rim of the valley. The swollen Winooski had receded over night and little resembled the the roaring torrent that earlier had swept through the valley. Every railroad bridge between Montpelier and White River Junction was carried away by flood waters.

Roads Only Slimy Paths Water still is several feet deep in the valleys where previously it had been thirty to fifty feet deep at the height of the flood. On the ground left bare by the subsiding waters was a foot of debris, silt and mud. What once had been highways were slime-covered river beds in many places. Every power plant and factory along the Winooski was a flooded and battered ruin. At Moretown, at the junction of the Mad and Winooski, it is estimated that half the homes were washed away. Many of the houses had been clipped off their foundations, as if with a giant razor. More than 2,000,000 feet of lumber, valued at $300,000, was washed from a lumberyard in Moretown, and lies scattered about the countryside for a radius of twenty-five miles. Business sections of both Barre and Montpelier have been wrecked. Foodl Supplies Ruined Food and supplies have been ruired by the water w'hich flooded basements and crept u pto the second floors of buildings in centers of both cities. Troopers patrol the streets here. Food is being rationed out at appointed canteens. Because of the favorable position, on higher ground, the capitol building escaped. The business sections of both Barre and Montpelier were wrecked. Hardly an unbroken piece of plate glass remained along the main street of either city. Montpelier is virtually under martial law. Troops patrol the streets and food is only given out at appointed canteens to those possessing proper ration cards. SLEET AMD SNOW FALL OVER PARTS OF INDIANA Washington, Mt. Vernon and Ft. Wayne Feel Winter’s Touch. Bn United Press WASHINGTON, Ind., Nov. 7. The first sleet of the year fell here today. With the thermometer hovering about the freezing mark and slowly descending, the sleet was expected to turn to snow. Sunday the mercury went down to 21 degrees, lowest of the season here. Bn United Press MT. VERNON, Ind., Nov. 7.—Mt. Vernon, southernmost Indiaha county seat, was in the grip of a blizzard this morning. Sleet and rain were falling, but the temperatures was ten degrees above the mark of 24 degrees recorded Sunday morning. Bu United Press FT. WAYNE, Ind., Nov. 7.—The first snow of the season occurred here Sunday, the Weather Bureau reporting a fall of three-fourths of an inch. Sunday night’s temperature was 26 degrees. BANDIT VICTIM BURIED Services for Slain Grocer Are Held at Wabash. Funeral services were held at Wabash Sunday for Charles Conrad, 55, of 858 W. Twenty-Eighth St., who was slain by four Negro bandits in a hold-up at the Standard Grocery, 2814 Clifton St., Wednesday. Six brothers and two sisters survive.

CLINIC FINDS QUICK WAY TO END COLDS

Advise Hospital Tested Method; Is Ideal for Home Use And Brings Relief in Few Hours A great many Indianapolis people—like James H. Springer, have learned that it is no longer necessary to let a cold make a person feel miserable or cause fear of pneumonia. For doctors at the hospital clinic are recommending a simple home treatment that brings quick, sure relief—often in a few hours. A severe cold had kept Mr. Springer from business several days. When nothing seemed to help him he called the clinic for advice. Doctors then recommended double strength doses of Cherry Pectoral—a highly concentrated mixture of ingredients which hospitals have found to be the quickest, safest and most dependable to end colds. With the first swallow he felt the soothing, comforting, healing warmth, from his nose passages deep down into his chest. In a few hours he felt lots better and in a day or so the cold was completely gone.

WEEK-ENDCAR TOLL IS THREE DEAD.SIX HURT Man and Crippled Daughter Killed as Interurban Strikes Auto. Three persons are dead and six injured as a result of week-end traffic accidents in and near Indianapolis. The dead: JOHN SANDERS, 58, of 1507 S. Pershing Ave. RUTH SANDERS, 22, his daughter, a cripple. NADINE REED, 6, Negro, 1408 Shepherd St. Sanders and his daughter were killed instantly Sunday night when their automobile w f as struck by an inbound Indianapolis & Cincinnati interurban at the Emerson Ave. crossing. Three Are Arrested Price Giles of Greensburg, motorman, told deputy sheriffs that he did - not know that the automobile had turned at the crossing until his car struck it. Giles, Lewis Leffler, St. Paul, conductor, and Fred Courtney, Shelbyville, conductor of the trailer, were ordered held on involuntary manslaughter charges by Deputy Coroner O. H. Bakemeier. Sanders was employed by the Gibraltar Cement Products Company, 1441 S. Harding St. His daughter had been a cripple since birth. Both were born near Franklin and had lived here for more than ten years. Sanders’ brother, Daniel Sanders, Indianapolis, is the only survivor. Nadine Reed, 6, Negro, 408 Shepherd St., died at city hospital Sunday afternoon of injuries received Saturday night when she was struck by an automobile driven by Fred Harris, 21, Negro, 1358 S. Pershing Ave., near her home. Harris is being held on an involuntary manslaughter charge.

Mother and Son Hurt Mrs. Mildred Fisher, 28, of 2130 Eastern Ave., and her son, Glenn, 8, were injured in a three-way accident in the 1400 block on Massachusetts Ave., Saturday night. A truck, driven by Levi Watkins, 32, Negro, 322 E. Louisiana St., struck an automobile driven by Clyde Fisher, 28, and overturned the car. Fisher’s car was hurled into an automobile driven by William Dyke 19, of 2139 Avondale PI. Watkins was arrested for being drunk, operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor and assault and battery. Hays Cushenberry, 54, Negro, 321 E. Louisiana St., who was riding with Watkins, was arrested on a drunk charge. Others injured are Jeff Hoover, 18, of 2340 Central Ave., bro.ten leg; Qramel Musgrave, 45, of 5916 Evanston St., lacerations; Miss Anna Freiberg, 42, same address, cuts, and Edward Meadows, 30, of 633 N. Jefferson Ave., lacerations. CLOSE REUNION CLASS Final Scottish Rite Reports Will Be Heard Wednesday Night. Adoniram Grand Lodge of Perfection will receive final reports from regional chairmen on the Scottish Rite membership campaign Wednesday night, and books will be closed for the class of candidates to receive the higher degrees Nov. 28 to Dec. 2 at the semiannual convocation and reunion. The campaign has included regional meetings over the state far several weeks. DIES OF FALL INJURIES Frank Wchlage Hurt Ten Days Ago; Funeral Is Wednesday. Frank Wehlage, 60, of 30 E. Minnesota St., died Saturday night at city hospital from injuries suffered when he fell ten days ago. Funeral services will be held at the Holy Family Catholic Church at Oldenburg, Ind., Wednesday. He came to Indianapolis three years ago, living with a brother, Joseph Wehlage. River Gives Up Body Bit Times Special PETERSBURG, In(|., Nov. 7. The body of Otto Melvin, drowned Friday in White River here, has been recovered. He was drowned when a sand boat he was piloting sank.

Note: Other eases reported dailyall certified to this paper by a member of the hospital clinic. Doctors find that this hospital medicine does far more than stop coughing instantly. It is absorbed by the whole system. This quickly checks pbelgru, heals irritation and drives out the cold from the nose passages, throat and chest. Just a few pleasant spoonfuls of Cherry Pectoral now and you'll feel like a different person tomorrow. At all druggists. 00c; twice as much in SI.OO hospital Riae.

COUGHS

Diana Clutters Up the Mails

—— :

Here are just a few of the thousands of answers received in the contest to see v/ho could fashion the most words from the letters contained in the phrase DIANA IN THE TIMES. Diana, you know, is the amazing heroine of Vida Hurst’s story now running in The Times. The answers varied from elaborate creations to simple longhand lists. They varied from six words in length to 2,056 —the prize winning list submitted by Miss Elizabeth Schoeppel, 1296 S. Randolph St.

FIRING SQUAD ENDSJjEVOLT Gomez Funeral Closes Violent Mexican Chapter. By G. F. FINE United Press Staff Correspondent MEXICO CITY, Nov. 7.—The recent Mexican revolution virtually passed into history today with funeral services for Gen. Arnulfo Gomez, one of the leaders of the revolt, who was captured and executed Friday by the government. Several thousand persons visited the home of Aiessio Robles yesterday to view Gomez’ body. In another casket beside that of the slain leader reposed the body of his nephew, Col. Francisco Gomez Vizcarra, who was executed at the same time as his uncle. Colonel Vizcarra’s funeral was late yesterday.

No announcement has been made as to the time of funeral services for three other revolutionary officers who were executed by the Calles government Saturday morning. The war department announced that the three, Gen v Adalberto Palacios, Col. Salvator Costanos and Major Francisco Meza Perez, were shot to death after summary court-martial. A sealed compartment containing five strong boxes with documents pertaining to activities of General Gomez has been discovered after several weeks’ search by the police, according to today’s announcement. NEGROES SCORE IN GARY FIGHT Erection of Separate School - Temporarily Halted. Bn United Pi-ess VALPARAISO, Ind., Nov. 7.—Negroes of Gary today won their fight against “Jim Crowism” in Gary public schools, at least temporarily. Judge Grant Crumpacker of Porter Circuit Court issued a temporary injunction against the Gary school cii,y, restraining it from accepting $15,000 appropriated by the civic city for building a high school building for Negro students now attending Emerson High School. A hearing on making the injunction permanent will be held here Dec. 12. Until then, work on the projected new building will be held up. Resentment of white students against transfer of Negro students to Emerson High School recently caused a strike of 1,400 students of the Emerson School. The separate Negro school building was planned as a compromise. INDIANA FARMER SLAIN Wound Suffered During Hold-Up Near Paoli Causes Death. Bu Times Special PAOLI, Ind., Nov. 7.—Hiram B. Lindley, 79, is dead today at his farm home near here, and James Hill, Paoli, is held as his slayer. It is charged the aged man was shot while Hill was attempting to rob him.

Authorities say that Lindley did not raise his hands quickly enough at the command of Hill, who fired a shotgun, shattering one of Lindley’s arms. Amputation was necessary, and the wounded man was unable to survive the shock. Wound Aftermath Fata! Bn Times Special LYONS, Ind., Nov. 7.—Roscoe Russell is dead here today of peritonitis which developed following a bullet wound suffered at the homecoming celebration here Sept. 15. The shot was fired by Frank Borden while resisting arrest by a deputy sheriff. Borden has been in custody here since the shooting.

Dressed Up Bu Times Special WATERLOO, Ind., Nov. 7. When Charles Butler, 25, of Spencervlle, appeared in Circuit Court here on a charge of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, he was attired in a tuxedo suit. Butler plead guilty to the charge and was sentenced to forty days at the penal farm and forbidden the privilege of driving an automobile for one year.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Bravery, Tragedy, and Comedy Bared in Mood

I"'" ONTPELIER, Nov. 7 Many stories of tragedy, of comedy and of I jV/1 1 daring today were told of the worst disaster this State ever has known. I A | Fifty-one members of the Avollo Club in Montpelier, gathered to dance at their clubhouse Thursday night, were marooned on the second floor of the building until Saturday and forced to live on bananas salvaged from a nearby fruit store. Mayor Edward H. Deabitt was forced to remain in the telephone company building until taken off by a boat. Miss M. A. MacAvoy rescued a coachman employed in the stables of her exclusive boarding establishment by lassoing him and dragging him onto the piazza roof. Mrs. Paul Lacross ran across a dam of jammed lumber and debris from her endangered house to the safety of that of a neighbor. Shortly afterward the wreckage broke up and was swept away. In the race for high land, it was impossible to save the cattle in many places and they perished in their stalls. At Waterbury State Hospital the entire herd of registered Holstein cattle was drowned. At one point along the Winooski, the bodies of cattle were seen to go over the falls at the rate of one a minute for almost an hour. A Central Vermont train had been marooned near Roxbury since Thursday noon. Passengers were eating in the express car and killed stray cows, which w'ere butchered in the dining car. Three families, totaling nineteen persons, have been living in a onefamily house at Richmond for two nights and a day on an island with three horses, four pigs and 200 chickens.

URGES CAREFUL DEFENSE PLAN Burton Condemns Extreme Pacifism Policy. Disarmament and a means for peaceful conciliation were declared to be the requisites for international peace by Theodore E. Burton, Ohio Congressman, at the Armistice memorial program in Caleb Mills Hall, Sunday afternoon. “We should avoid a bloated or unnecessarily expensive navy and should give far more careful study to foreign affairs and the place which we should assume among nations,” he said. “Every effort should be exerted for the establishment of principles of international law and the maintenance of a policy of justice and generosity toward all nations, great and small. “On the other hand, there must be condemnation of extreme pacifism and a policy of non-resistance. While the world is full of the din end threat of war, we must maintain reasonable preparedness, or what George Washington termed ‘a respectably defensive posture.’"

CHIEF CHAPLAIN HERE Col. John T. Axton Speaks to City Ministers. Col. John T. Axton, Washington, chief of Army chaplains, spoke this morning before the Indianapolis Ministers Association at the New Jersey Street Methodist Episcopal Church. He was the guest of honor at a luncheon at the Chamber of Commerce Sunday morning. Colonel Axton addressed cadets at Culver Military Academy. At night he spoke at a religious service at Ft. Benjamin Harrison on prevention of war through development of good-will. Others on the program at the conference of chaplains were Dr. K. Palmer Miller, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, Franklin; the Rev. Paul H. Maurer, Evangelical Church, Vincennes, and the Rev. W. Edward Roberts, Bethel M .E. Church, Bethel. Bean Shooter Ban Bu Times Special BRAZIL, Ind., Nov. 7.—Small boys here who have been doing some sniping with bean shooters have been warned by Police Chief Amos Fulk that the practice must be stopped.

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REMUS FIGHT IN GOURTOPENED Asks Judge to Admit Depositions in Case. Bit United Press CINCINNATI, Nov. 7.—George Remus, former bootleg king, started today his fight to free himself of a first degree murder charge in the slaying of his wife, Imogene, Oct. 6. Remus, with his attorney, Charles H. Elston, went before Judge Chester R. Shook, in Criminal Court, arguing with State’s attorneys on the admissibility of evidence in depositions, taken in eight cities. Remus charges the depositions show the association of his wife and Franklin L. Dodge, former Justice Department agent, in a conspiracy plot to rob him, cause his imprisonment, deportation and institute divorce proceedings. Judge Shook ordered the depositions gone over before the trial next Monday.

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END FREE LOVE WITH CHILDREN, WARNSAUTHOR Marriage Gets Stuffy, Needs Emotion Outlet, Says Bertrand Russell. BY GLADYS CRAIG “Marriage is apt to become stuffy, like a closed room, after we liecome accustomed to each other. A strange person furnishes new stimulus to the imagination. It is not a good thing to close up the imagination,” declared Betrand Russell, English author, whose writings about love and jharriage have startled two continents. He was in Indianapolis, Sunday, to talk at the Kirschbaum community center. Earlier in the day he discussed freely his views with a reporter at the Columbia Club. Discusses Free Love Recently the press described the distinguished English author and educator as “tall, with iron gray hair, and piercing black eyes.” Except for the iron gray hair, the description is inaccurate. His iconoclastic ideas stand out in strange contrast with the gentle simplicity of his personality. Asked whether we dare practiceffree love in the face of present social pressure, he said: “Just In so far as it is compatible with not starving to death. Economic reasons force us to lead surreptitious lives. But we should become bolder and bolder, and talk the matter over with our personal friends. This will help to spread enlightenment. It took a long time to build sex morality into the race, and it will take a long time to get it out again.” The cure of jealousy, Ru3sell said, was a very difficult matter, and he admitted that he had not been able to eradicate it from his own life. “Jealousy comes from a feeling of outraged rights. We must realize that we have no rights whatever in any other person. The economic independence of women will help to control jealousy. Unless man supports her, he can not help what she does. He will have to put up with it,” Regrets Lindsey Ouster Russell said that he is in thorough accord with Judge Ben Lindsey’s plan of comparionate marriage. “I think that it would be a very good thing for America to adopt,” he said. “I was sorry to see Lindsey ousted.” The creation of children, Russell thinks, is a different matter altogether. As soon as a child is on the way, fche parents ought to marry, for if they do not the child will resent it. And where children are involved, the union should be permanent, if possible, thought not necessarily exclusive of other affairs. “The constant shuffling of parents is very bad for children." Russell spoke a good word for nursery schools, and said that the responsibility for children should be divided between parents and experts. “Parents have such silly emotions about their children. They overestimate them and make them nervous. Parents exist to see that their children come to no harm, but other than that they should let them alone. Children need the society of other children.” Too Many Women Teachers In regard to turning over the care of children to the State, he said that at present the State is worse than the tvorst parents. “The Sate brings its sons and daughters up to fight each other. I can conceive of a State in the future which could ! care for children more intelligently | than parents. But not now.” Russell said that we have too

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Notable Here

lii

Bertrand Russell, famed English scholar, who spoke here Sunday.

many women school teachers in America. “No virgin, unless she is very young, should have the care of a child. She demands too much from him and is prone to make of him an outlet for her own repressed emotions. Emotional response should not be expected from children. That belongs to sex.” Likes Elmer Gantry The social order in America also is controlled by women, and this one reason for the mental inferiority of America, Russell said. “However, you Americans underestimate your intelligence. Some of your writers, such as Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson and Sinclair Lewis are more appreciated in Europe than at home. ’Elmer Gantry’ is such screaming fun. At first I thought that it was overdrawn, but since my last trip over, I have decided that it is not.” # Will Durant has said that we need our wisest and not our slickest men in office, but Bertrand Russell thinks that running the Government is too soft a job for a firstrate man. “The best men should be left free for the more important work of the world, such as music, writing and science. In time of crisis the Government needs a good man ,of course. And in time of crisis, America has always had a good man.” WANTS SECOND ARSONHEARING Prosecutor Would Try Former Klan Official. Bn Times Special ROCKVILLE, Ind., Nov. 7. Samuel F. Withrow', former kligraph of the Ku-Klux Klan of Parke County, will face a second trial on a charge of arson at the term of the Parke Circuit Court to begin here Nov. 21. Prosecuting Attorney Benjamin F. Stephenson announces. The prosecutor is indignant over a jury disagreement in the first trial cf Withrow w'hich ended a few w'eeks a"o. He announces that Fred King, State fire marshal’s attorney, will aid the prosecution in the second trial, and J. M. Johns, local lawyer, may also be retained. Indictment of Withrow resulted from burning of two school buildings at Bridgeton during the 1924 election in Parke County, when Klan and anti-Klan forces were in a bitter struggle.

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.NOV. 7, 1927

INDIANA TOWN - RESIDENTS TO VOTE TUESDAY Women Ballot for First Time at Ingalls; Berne Faces Dispute. Elections will be held throughout Indiana Tuesday by, incorporated towns for naming town board members, clerks and treasurers. In some instances the voters will not go to the polls, as no tickets are in the' field and present officials will remain in office until the date of the next election. • Democrats at Berne have placed a ticket in the running against the Republicans, but a doubt exists as to whether or not any Democrat could hold office if elected, due to failure of the party to comply with the law requiring that fifteen days before an election a petition be filed with the town clerk for a place on the ballot. Contest at Lewisville There is only one ticket at Lewisville, but candidates are without opposition, there being a contest for ’ every office. Both Democrats and Republicans are on a Citizens’ ticket. No election will be held at i Knightstowrn. Only the Republicans nominated candidates for town of- * flees last spring and these men will assume office without further contest at the first council meeting next January. For the first time in the history, women are candidates at Ingalls. A campaign by supporters of Republican and Citizens’ tickets has i aroused interest to such an extent that it is believed practically every voter will go to the polls. Two Towns Voting There is no contest at Lefontaine, which has a bi-partisan Citizens’ ticket. North Manchester will vote on Republican and Democratic candidates. Both parties also have tickets at Lagro. Danville is the only place in Hendricks County where there are two 1 ’ tickets. Other towns have nonpartisan tickets. Litigation is in prospect after voters at Shoals cast their ballots. Supporters of a Citizens’ ticket assert two town board members are to be named this year and have nominated two. but backers of a Re- . publican ticket say only one is to be chcscn. Regardless of the outcome of the election, it appears certain the dispute will be carried into court. BURY BUSINESS MAN Hugo Schisscl, 40, Die: After Long Illness. Funeral services for Hugo Schissel, 40. 749 N. De Quincy St., who j died Saturday after a long illness, day at the Flanncr & Buchanan | were to be conducted at 2 p. m. tomortuary with burial In Crown Hill, Cemetery. Mr. Schissel was head of the [Service Construction Company, which he organized. He and a brother operated a bath house at West St. and the canal nearly twenIty years after the death of their father. Otto Schissel.

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