Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 206, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 January 1928 — Page 9
JAN. 5, 1928.
ASKS JUDGE TO CANCEL ORDERS FORCLEMENCY Three Under Suspended Sentences Arrested on Other Charges. Opportunities given some people are disregarded, according to Deputy Prosecutor John L. Niblack. Saturday he will ask Criminal Judge James A. Collins to revoke suspended and withheld judgments against three persons, who, Niblack said, couldn’t resist the urge to violate criminal laws. George Worley, 24, of 114 S. Gladstone Ave., last June was given a suspended sentence of one to ten years for Issuing fraudulent checks. Arrested as Car Thief Evidence showed he posed as Police Chief Claude Worley’s cousin, Niblack said. Last week he was arrested for vehicle taking. He is alleged to have stolen an automobile owned by G. A. Wright, 118 McLean PI. Carrying a kit of burglary tools after he was under suspended sentence of one to ten years for vehicle taking will cause Niblack to seek revocation of Joe Hodge’s sentence suspension. Under Indiana statutes, possession of these tools is a felony if a person has been convicted on any other charge. High School Boy Involved A desire to obtain and pawn trombones will spell the same fate for Albert Linn, 19, of 842 Prospect St., a local high school pupil. He is alleged to have stolen a trombone from Derwin Sweet, i350 W. Thirty-Fourth St., at the school. Judge Collins withheld judgment in a vehicle taking charge during good behavior. The court instructed him to “finish school and make a man out of himself’’ at the lime. The new charges will be used as evidence in the revocation hearings and later will be submitted to the grand jury. Helps Man He Sent to Jail IRVINGTON, N. ,J„ Jan. s.—His mind at rest with the knowledge that the prisoner’s family would be kept warm, Recorder F. Stoddard, after shoveling their coal into the basement, sent Henry J. Dubee to jail. Deer Killed in Crash With Bus CROSS RIVER, N. Y., Jan. 5. A 250-pound deer, sighting a school bus coming down the road, lowered its head, dashed toward it, and was killed on the Cross River highway, near here.
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Julia Faye When “King of Kings,” the Cecil B. DeMille feature movie, opens at English’s on Sunday night, Jan. 8, Julia Faye will be seen as Martha of Bethany. JAPAN IS IN TURMOIL OVER MODERN DANCE Police Attempts to Curb New Pastime Fall Flat. Bu NBA Service TOKYO, Jan. s—The modem dance is a great source of anxiety to Japanese police. Dancing according to the western fashion has become nearly as troublesome as radicalism. The most recent attempt to curb this “barbaric pastime” has been instituted in Kobe, one of Japan’s commercial centers. Police headquarters of that city has ordered all dancing to cease at midnight. Also, the dance hall proprietor must not employ more than five professional partners. Regulations of all sorts have been issued to curb the modem dance in Japan, but authorities continue their hunt for a solution of this great “problem.” 25 IN*Hg ROUND SCHOOL ‘Y’ Aviation Project Will Last Twen-ty-Five Weeks. Twenty-five students have enrolled for the ground school aviation course at the Y. M. C. A. the first attempted by any “Y” in the country. It is being held in cooperation with the aviation department of the Chamber of Commerce aiffi the local flying corps of the National Guard. Classes meet each Tuesday and Friday night for twenty-five weeks. Completion of the course will make students capable of doing all ground work. The next step in becoming a pilot is to take air instruction.
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HOOSiER AUTHORS HELP BOOK WORLD Noted Writers of This State Contributed Many Volumes for Publication Last Year and Will Increase the Number in 1928. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN Hoosier authors contributed heavily last year to the general output of books. Indications are that this State will even increase the number of books during 1928 over last year.
The Bobbs-Merrill Company, publishers, of this city in the last year contributed many first sellers, some not by Indiana authors. Meredith Nicholson’s new novel, “The Chevalier of the Cumberland” is now running in Cosmopolitan and will be published by Bobbs-Merrill this spring. Elmer Davis of Aurora, Ind., has a literary column on the New York Herald Tribune and has published two books last year. They are “Strange Woman” and “Show Window.” MacCready Huston has written many magazine articles and has contributed to the South Bend Tribune last year. The following Indiana authors had books published last year by Bobbs-Merrill: Karl W. Detzer, author of “The Marked Man.” He was bom In Ft. Wayne and now lives in Leland, Mich. Paul Wilstach, author of “Patriots Off Their Pedestals.” Bom in Lafayette and now lives in Washington, D. C. Charles R. Williams, author of “The Return of the Prodigal.” Was former editor of the News. He died last year. William Herschell, author of a new edition of “The Smile-Bringer.” He is most active of the living Indiana poets. Florence Bass, author of “Stories of Early Times in the Great West.” Was born at Columbus, Ind., and now lives in Indianapolis. Received the following communication from the Century Company: Bennett J. Doty, the young American soldier of fortune whose escapades in the Foreign Legion almost brought him before the firing squad, hassjust finished writing the story of his adventures. The book is to be called “My Adventures in the Foreign Legion” and the Century Company will publish it some time next month. In this book Doty promises to reveal “inside” story of the famous Legion of the Damned. He is generally acknowledged to be the first and only man to desert the legion and live to tell the tale of his adventures. * Doty enlisted in the American Army in 1917 and went into action in France a few months later with a tramp artillery outfit. The armistice was signed a year later, and Bennett J. Doty found himself a young man of some eighteen years with a keen appetite for action and no means of satisfying it. For a few years he wandered around “seeing the world” and then in 1925 he joined the Foreign Legion under the name of Gilbert Clair and was Sfent out to Syria to fight the Druse, the strange tribe of Mohammedan heretics who still worship the Golden Calf of Baal. Doty was quickly passed through the whole repertoire of thrills which the Foreign Legion has in store for its soldiers. Within less than a year he was awarded the Croix de Guerre
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Best Sellers The following is a list of the six best sellers in fiction ahd non-fiction in Brentano’s New York stores: FICTION “The Bridge ol San Buis Ray,” T. Wilder, A. & C. Boni. “Jalna,” M. de la Roche, LittleBrown. "Adam and Eve," J. Erskine, Bobbs-Merrill. “Red Sky at Morning,” M. Kennedy. Doubleday-Page. Death Comes for the Archbishop,” W. Cather. Knopf. “The Vanguard,” A. Bennett. Doran. NON-FICTION “Napoleon," E. Ludwig. Bonl & Liveright. “Bismarck.” E. Ludwig. LittleBrown. “Our Times,” M. Sullivan, Scribner. “As I Knew Them.” H. L. Stoddard. Harper. "John Paul Jones," P. Bussell, Brentanos. “My Pious Friends and Drunken Companions.” F. Shay and J. Held, Jr., Macaulay.
for distinguished service under fire. Finally, he became “thoroughly fed up” with legion life. He recruited a small band of rebels from his company and deserted the Legion. During their flight from the post this little group encountered a hostile band of Druse and were forced to defend themselves with a single rifle. This incident, says Doty, was one of the most harrowing experiences in his whole career. Doty intends to remain in New York until after his book is published. Then he will return to his home in Biloxi. Miss., where he will spend his time writing fiction. nan Indianapolis theaters today offer: “Gay Paree” at English's: Weaver Brothers at Keith’s; “Sugar Babies” at the Mutual; “Beau Sabreur” at the Apollo: “The Gay Retreat” at the Ohio; “Man, Woman and Sin” at the Circle; “Spring Fever” at the Indiana; “Stepping Along” at the Lyric and movies, at the Isis. Ghost Just Having Fun FLUSHING, N. Y., Jan. 5.—A “ghost” which terrorized residents for six months by banging on a piano in a “haunted” house, has turned out to be a 60-year-old man, who “just wanted some fun.” Tunnel Used by 165,000 Vehicles NEW YORK, Jan. s.—More than 165,000 motor vehicles from New York City left town through the Holland vehicular tunnel during the holidays.
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OLDEST STATE BREWERY GOES TO JUNK HEAP Prohibition Ruins Company Started at Vincennes in 1859. B,u Unitcd Press VINCENNES, Ind., Jan. 5.—A strange obituary was published recently in the Vincennes Sun—the obituary of Indiana’s oldest brewery, which passed out of existence the first of the year. The old, ivy-cov-ered building, where good beer has been brewed since 1859, until prohibition went into effect, and which has been known as the Hack & Simon Brewery since 1874, is being vacated, its costly machinery sold for junk and its cool cellars emptied for the last time. “Os course, the closing of the brewery is no financial catastrophe for Vincennes,” the article reads. “The old brewery has been dying for years. The end is not unexpected. I , o vast pay roll will be lost to the city, but an old friend is passing away and if there's a bit of sentiment in you, it makes you a bit sad, and we don’t mean to be facetious either, as far as the prohibition law is concerned.” Definite shutdown of the plant is a sad chapter in the lives of a small group of men, who have spent years in mastering what is rapidly becoming a lost art. Julius Hack, manager of the plant, declares that the old company’s troubles have been growing since the advent of prohibition. Attempts were made to manufacture near beer, but resulted in failure. “When prohibition came we owned business property, had Liberty bonds and $150,000 in the bank,” Hack explained. “It’s all gone now. There was .nothing else to do but close down for good. When we got so hard up that we couldn’t issue calendars this year, as has been or practice for the last fifty years, we decided to junk the plant.” TEACH DISTILLING HERE Chemistry C'lasswork Showed Him How it Worked, Youth Says. Bu NBA Service NEW YORK, Jan. 5.—A high school youth of Irvington, N. J., arrested for violating the prohibition laws, blamed his high school training for the predicament. He told police that the twenty-five-gallon-a-week stills were manufactured as a result of knowledge obtained in. his chemistry class. However, no increased enrollments have been noted in the study of chemistry. Officials say that knowledge other than set forth in school is necessary to build booze plants.
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ASKS SUPREME COURT TO QUASH MEAT ORDER Test of Anti-Trust Law Seen If U. S. Upholds Decree. Bu Times Svecial WASHINGTON, Jan. s.—Charles Evans Hughes, as counsel for the Swift and Armour meat packing interests, has asked the United States Supreme Court to demolish the famous “packers’ consent decree of 1928.” This plea is opposed by Assistant United States Attorney General William Donovan. If the court holds that the decree is valid it is expected to involve an anti-trust law test of the validity of activities of the great meating concerns dating back more than a decade. Hughes asserted the decree is “without the slightest foundation in law or fact.” BURIAL IS REAL : EAT Coffin for 500-Pound Woman Is Too Big for Doors. Bn United Press NEW YORK, Jan. s.—When Mrs. Mary Emory died here the funeral director could not get the specially built coffin into the house. So he hired ten men to carry the body
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