Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 173, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1927 — Page 2
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FLIERS’ BODIES FOUND PINNED BENEATHPLANE JVlissing U. S. Army PriL vates’ Flight Ended in Disaster. Bu United Press UNIONTOWN, Pa., Nov. 28. Lieutenant Eugene A. Bayley, commander of Burgess field, here, located the wrecked airplane and bodies of Privates E. R. Emory and William D. Zollman, missing army fliers, a few miles from Uniontown, today. Bayley found the wreckage soon after he had started an airplane search of Chestnut Ridge, between Uniontown and Somerfield, Pa. He returned to Burgess field and with Coroner S. A. Balthz went back to the scene of the crash in an automobile. Bayley said the plane was completely wrecked and bodies of the two men pinned under the wreckage. Zollman and Emory had left Washington Friday morning for Columbus, Ohio. Bayley said he sighted the wrecked plane in a densely wooded section of the mountain and flew near the tree tops to make identification positive. He said.he could find no place to land, so returned to Uniontown. Army planes from Bolling field, Washington, searched for the fliers Saturday and Sunday, when they failed to reach their destination and no word was received from them. They were to have dropped messages at Cumberland, Md., and Uniontown. M. F. Byrne, a traveling salesman, reported today that an Army plane had landed along the highway near Somerfield Friday and he had directed the two fliers to Burgess field. After they took off he lost trace of them.
G. 0. P. EDITORS VOTE TO INVITE COOLIDGE President Will Be Asked to Speak Here at March Convention. President Coolidge will be invited , to speak at the golden jubilee homecoming banquet of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association, March P, 1928, at the Columbia Club. Plans were made at the club Sunday at a meeting of officers, executive committee and district chairmen. Will R. Wood, Tenth District Representative and dean of the Indiana congressional delegation, also Will be invited. The anniversary program will continue two days, opening March 8. Wives of newspaper men will attend a bridge party at the Columbia Club that afternoon. A theater parjy is planned for them the following afternoon. Will B. Maddock, editor of the Bloomfield News, program committee member and district chairman, has named committees to complete plans for the jubilee. ‘ASBESTOS KING’ DIES Charles Manville, 92, Began Building Fortune in “Forties.” 81l United Press PLEASANTVILLE, N. Y., Nov. 28. —Charles B. Manville, 92, founder of the Johns-Manville Company, died at his home here last night after an illness of several days. Manville, the country’s first “asbestos king,” started building hla fortune when he emigrated to the West in the “forties” with other pioneers, and in Wisconsin started his first mines. His son, H. Edward Manville, is chairman of the board of the Johns-Manville Company. BOY’S LICENSE PERILED Attorney General Rules Regarding Minor Driver Permits. Obtaining a ruling from Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom that the Secretary of State has power to revoke a permit issued a minor to operate a motor vehicle, State Police Chief Robert T. Humes, has asked revocation of the license of John Mitchell, 16, of Clinton. Humes said he had received com- ' plaints charging the boy was a reckless driver and speeder.
MANY END COLDS BY NOVEL METHOD
Relieved Overnight by Using Quick Remedy Endorsed For Home Use by Clinic Head colds and chest colds can now be ended quickly—often overnight—by the unique double action of a home remedy now recommended by doctors at the health clinic. And druggists here say that vast numbers of Indianapolis people, like Mrs. Edna Muse, have found that it quickly drives out a stubborn cold, even in severe cases where every well known remedy used had failed. Doctors at the clinic were called for advice when Mrs. Muse’s cold grew worse, causing fear of pneumonia. They immediately advised Cherry Pectoral —a concentrated mixture of ingredients which hospitals have found to be the quickest, safest and most dependable to end a cold. Almost instantly she felt the comforting, healing warmth —from her nose passages deep down into her chest. In a few hours she vai greatly relieved and in another day or so was entriely rid of her cold. Note: Otter oases reported all certified to this paper by a member pf the hospital clinic, ’ f
Where 9 Died in Mutiny of Convicts
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Here is Folsom State prison, California, where 12 DO convicts mutinied on Thanksgiving Day, and where nine men were killed and twenty-two were wounded in the battle that followed. Many of the prisoners had obtained rifles from an unknown source and for hours defied police, deputies, penitentiary guards and militiamen.
The cell room in Folsom State prison, California, turned into an armed fort by hundreds of convicts in a Thanksgiving day mutiny is pictured above. Warden Court Smith, who was held a prisoner in his office for hours, finally escaped. He is shown in the inset.
ROB THEATER, OILJTATION More Than S3OO Taken in Two Hold-Ups. Bandits who timed their work so that they were seen by no one but their victims, Sunday night held up the cashier of the Uptown Theater, College Ave. and Forty-Second St., and a Standard Oil filling station at Pleasant Run Blvd. and Madison Ave. Loot of more than S3OO was taken in the two robberies. Miss Josephine Day, Uptown cashier, said a man walked up to the cashiei’s window, 1 pointed a gun at her and demanded money. She handed him $250. Walter Van Arsdell, 1137 Clive St., filling station attendant, said that three men forced him to take sllO from the safe and escaped in an automobile. WANT AUTO TAX KILLED Half Cut In Excise Not Suitable to Manufacturers. Bu Times Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Actioiof the House Ways and Means Committee in cutting automobile excise tax from three to one and one-half per cent is not satisfactory to manufacturers. They want the entire tax wiped out. Pressure is being applied from all sections of the country upon members of Congress to have the committee’s decision changed on the floor of the House. If the fight fails there it will foe carried to the Senate. Democratic Congressmen, plus a sizeable group of Republicans, are prepared to fight for abolition of the tax on new automobiles, which costs motorists nearly $100,000,000 a year. Quebec Archbishop to Be Cardinal Bu United Press ROME, Nov. 28. Archbishop Rouleau of Quebec will be made a cardinal at the consistory on Dec. 19, it was learned today.
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Doctors And that this hospital medicine does far more than stop coughing instantly. It is absorbed by the whole system. This quickly checks phlegm, 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. Hospital directions with each bottle. At all druggists, 60c; twice as much in SI.OO hospital size.
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E WASHINGTON ST. gentry • will present a smoothshaven appearance the next few days, if proper brushing equipment has anything to do with it. A pretty miss, with a beguiling smile and a petite punchboard, left a string of stiff-bristled shaving brushes in her wake Friday as she canvassed the district, taking 35 cents out of every dollar that came her way. “Punches don’t run more than' 35 cents,” she smiled at her admiring customers, “and you win something with each punch.” Gentlemen hesitated only long enough to draw another coaxing smile from the shaving brush siren before punching out a 35cent number. It was not until the vision had wrapped her coat tightly about her lithesome figure and tripped on to new field of tonsorial assistance that bighearted fellows who “really did need anew brush” reflected that, singularly, none of them had ' chanced to get one of the punches under the maximum figure of 35 cents. “Painless extraction,” they agree, is not purely a dental phrase. ANSTESS MUST SERVE Federal Appeal Court Upholds 18 Months’ Liquor Sentence. Sentence of eighteen months In Federal Prison, imposed by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell on Wallace E. Anstess, Indianapolis, must be served. Decision was confirmed by vthe Circuit Court of at Chicago, according to word received by United States District Attorney Albert Ward. The mandate is expected here within thirty days. Anstess, at liberty under $15,000 bond, will be required to pay $2,500 fine and be sent to prison. Anstess was convicted of receiving 1,156 quart s of bonded whisky, sixty-four quarts of gin and eleven quarts of French wine from Detroit, packed as “household goods.” AGED CITY WOMAN DIES Funeral Services Tuesday for Mrs. Nancie A. Miller. Funeral services of Mrs. Nancie A. Miller, 67, who died early Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Charles M. Bemauer, 1038 St. Paul St., will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Bernauer. The Rev. G. L. Farrow, pastor of Victory Memorial Methodist Protestant Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Miller had been an Indianapolis resident for forty-three years. She was a member of the Victory Memorial Protestant Church. She is survived by a brother, Harrison Tucker, Osgood, Ind.; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Gillman, Paducah, Ky., and Mrs. Eva Bell, Brook Park, Minn., and two daughters, Mrs. Bemauer and Mrs. John H. Henley, both of Indianapolis. KLAN WOMEN IN _ ROW Bu Times Special LA P(J)RTE, Ind., Nov. 28.—Several members of the local organization of Women of the Ku Klux Klan have resigned as the result 6f a dispute over alleged misuse of S2OO in organization funds. Laura M. Foote, Indianapolis, realm commander, has interceded in effort to settle the trouble, but her emissaries sent here have so far failed in their efforts to ma<;e peace, .../ .'. ./v ' i '• '
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RACES TOLD TO HOLJMJREEDS Author Condemns Practice of Sending Missionaries. Great religions of the world have a common thread of truth, variously expressed by the Golden Rule. Let each race live up to the truths expressed in their particular creed and all will rise to a higher spiritual level. Such was the advice of Lewis Browne, author, in a talk on “This, Believing World” at the open forum at Kirshbaum Community Center Sunday night. Browne has written a best seller bearing this title, and, although not yet in his thirties, has two other popular volumes to his credit. They are “This Man Heine” and “Stranger Than Fiction." The latter is a story of the Jewish race, written in popular style. Origins of the great religions of the world were traced by the speaker, and he pointed out how in each country books have been written proving that their particular brand is the only true one Since each has its own truth and is adapted to the particular country and race where it has successfully served, Browne condemns the practice of sending religious missionaries as impertinent. The Sermon on the Mount, he declare was an expression of highest ethical truth, but many of its tenets had been uttered by other great teachers before the time of Christ.
Evangelism of the Almee Semple McPherson variety was roundly condemned as being “opium for the downtrodden."
PICK STARJONIGHT Movie ‘Lead’ to Be Chosen at Tomlinson Hall. Selection of the star for the Junior Chamber of Commerce movie exposition picture will be made from Indianapolis beauties by Director Don O. Newland tonight at 9 at Tomlinson Hall. Names of other members of the cast will be announced, following selection of a leading lady. Interior scenes, on Tomlinson hall stage, and exteriors, in the business and residential districts, will be made during the week. Competition for the part of “Joe,” the fat boy in “Our Gang” comedies, also will be conducted tonight. Doors will be opened at 7 fc. m. Additional neighborhood winners include two “Wheezers,” John Sullivan, 2170 N. Pennsylvania St., and Edwin Russell, 1946 Ashland Ave., both from Stratford theater district. Dream theater: Vernell'iiiselman, 2229 Station St.; Bobby Worth, 2233 Avondale PL; Bernard Taylor, 2367 N. Olney St.; Mary Taylor, 2367 N. Olney St.; Marion Lambert, 2329 N. La Salle St., Betty Jean Carstadt, 340 Bell Ave. Broad Ripple theater: Catherine Hamilton, Earl Wilson, Robert Horsley and Mary Elizabeth Myers. ASSERTS DRINKING LESS Indiana Anti-Saloon Leader Speaks at Richmond. Bu Un ; ted Press RICHMOND, Ind., Nov. 28. Benefits of prohibition were listed by E. Shumaker, superintendent of the Indiana Anti-Salocn League, Sunday, in an address at the West Richmond Friends Church. “Before prohibition,” Shumaker said, “there were 15,000,000 dr.nking people. Since passager of the Eighteenth amendment, steady drir. kers number only 1,000,000, and occasional drinkers 3,000,000.” Dr. Shumaker said that pronibition had closed 236 distilleries and 1,002' breweries. He expressed the opinion that no one need fear prohibition would not be continued.
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RENOUNCE OLD WEDDING PACT AS COMPANIONS Haldeman-Julius and His Wife to Rewed; Assail Church Ceremony. Bu United Press __ KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 28. While the clergy of Kansas City Sunday was decrying the so-called companionate marriage of Aubrey Roselle and Josephine HaldemanJulius of Girard, Kan, E. Halde-man-Julius, father of the bride, announced that he and his wife, galled by religion, would rewed as companions. Haldeman-Julius declared that for many years he had felt the “humiliation of our wedding ceremony, loaded as it is with spooks and choice specimens of hypocrisy and hokum, leaving me with the conviction that our married life had been forced to carry a stain which can foe removed only by anew marriage, Mrs. Haldeman-Julius and I. therefore, shstl remarry at an early date.” Repudiate Old Wedding The publisher said he and his wife would repudiate the old church wedding with “its barbarisms and its insults to intelligence.” The editor termed his action a gesture of revolt against clerical presumptiousness. * “The Holy Ghost,” said Halde-man-Julius, “had nothing to do with my marriage." The Girard publisher and his wife planned to be remarried by the Rev. L. M. Birkhead, pastor of the Unitarian Church of Kansas City. Birkhead read the service at the marriage of Roselle and Joseph. Dr. Birkhead, when questioned on the subject es companionate marriage, said candidates for matrimony should not be made to promise to live together until “death do us part.” Also, he said the question, “who giveth this woman away?” should be stricken from civilized marriage ceremony. Branded Publicity Stunt The Rev. J. W. Bradbury, pastor of a Baptist church here, declared in his pulpit Sunday that a companionate marriage was a return to the primitive. Another pastor said Roselle-Haldeman-J ulius marriage should not be recognized by law or sanctioned by society. Dr. W. W. Tetley, Methodist pastor, charged advocates of companionate marriage with seeking to “give dignity to adultery and divorce.” Many pastors In their pulpits branded the companionate wedding of the Girard residents as a “publicity stunt.” Lion Cubs Amuse Guests Bu United Press FRENCH LICK, Ind., Nov. 28. The guests of French Lick Springs hotel have been intrigued with four four-months-old lions and two six-months-old tigers, who play with the caretaker about the hotel. The animals that within a year will be ferocious are playful, if handled diplomatically, though vicious and temperamental if things do not satisfy them.
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Once More the Prince Lands Full Tilt in Mud
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Here’s the Prince of Wales, in a brand new picture of last week, just as he arrived for the famous Quorn hunt. Yes, he fell off his horse today.
Bu United Press MELTON MOWBRAY, England, Nov. 28.—The Prince of Wales was thrown from his horse again today when the horse’s legs caught on a rail while the prince was fox hunting with the Quorn hounds. Wales, unhurt, mounted another horse and resumed the hunt. Wales’ horse caught its hind legs Billy Sunday to Preach PETERSBURG, Ind., Nov. 28. Billy Sunday and his evangelistic party will hold two weeks services here commencing Wednesday, according to an announcement by the Rev. J. C. McClung. Accommodations have been arranged for 3,000 in the local tabernacle. Delegations from nearby towns and cities are planning to attend the meetings. ***loi!ds Stop a cold before it stops you. Take HILL'S Cascara-Bromide -Quinine. Stops the cold, checks the fever, opens the bowels, tones the system. Insist on HILL’S. Red box, 30c. All druggists. HILL’S. Cueua - Bromide - Quinine
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in the top rail of a fence, and the prince went head first into the hiud. He lay so quietly for a moment that riders near him feared he was seriously injured—particularly remembering the death Saturday from fox hunting injuries of Lady Victoria Bullock, only daughter of the Earl of Derby. But as his companions ran to help him, Wales scrambled to his feet, spattered with mud.
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EIGHT VIOLENT DEATHS. STATE WEEK-END LIST Two Slayings Included In Toll; Suicide Takes One. Eight persons are dead today in Indiana, victims of violence over the week-end. Two slayings, a suicide and two automobile tragedies are included in the toll. Homer Lowry, 19, Gary, was fatally shot when four bandits robbed the Sunset Inn, Dunes highway resort. The bandits obtained $25 in loot from two men and a woman, patrons of the place. Hubert Hinkle, 21, Bloomington, died at New Albany of bullet wound suffered Nov. 12 at the home of Guy Smith, 45, during a fight over payment for a quantity of liquor. Ludwig Genthner, 68, Ft. Wayne, committeed suicide by hanging at his home. He had been sick. Floyd Garringer, 26, Chesterton, State highway commission employe, was killed wljlen his auto collided with one driven by William Kline, Gary, on the Dunes highway east of Gary. Miss Ida Cobb, 24, Miller Station, was killed when an Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad switch engine struck an auto in which she was riding. George Rusher, 32, Newberry, was instantly killed 'while hunting when a shotgun he was carrying was accidentally discharged. James W. Smith, 54, Muncie fruit dealer, is dead of acute alcoholism. Smith died at the home of Harry Goodman, Burlington Heights, a Muncie suburb. Goodman, William A. McClelian, Frank Van Matre and James McCarty are being held pending investigation of the tragedy. Harrison Spain, 37, St- Louis, Mo,, was killed instantly when he accidentally fell beneath a Baltimore &s Ohio freight train at Washington. ENGINEERS PLAN QUIZ The committee of engineers, headed by Daniel B. Luten, named to conduct an examination to pick an as-'itant city building commissioner and the chief sign inspector, made a final draft of questions today. Date for the examination has not been set.
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