Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 252, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1928 — Page 9

Second Section

THEFT WAVE SPURS POLICE TO NEW DRIVE More Property Is Stolen in First 57 Days of 1928, Worley Finds. MORE ALSO RECOVERED Unemployment Increase Is One Big Factor, Is Chief’s View. Five figures at the foot of a column spurred Police Chief Claude M. Worley today to drive his men harder toward suppression of thievery in Indianapolis. The numbers disclosed that $13,880 more in property was stolen in the first fifty-seven days of 1928 than in the same period of 1927. Police continued to roundup loiterers and charge them with vagrancy. Twenty-nine were booked on vagrancy charges Monday night and questioned today. Four were found in a blind tiger nad the others loitering poolrooms and on the streets. Many admitted that they had not been working for some time and were unable to explain their means of support, Chief Worley declared. “Men found working or able to give a good account of themselves will not be bothered,” the chief said. “But we believe that these safe robberies were home talent affairs and we want to put an end to them.” The chief was not admitting that his men have fallen down, despite the wave of twenty-six burglaries over the week-end. His reports showed that his men have recovered more stolen property during the first period this year than last. The crooks just have been so active that the police have not been quite able to keep up. Unemplyoment Spurs Crime The increase in the number of unemployed has added to the problem, Worley says. “We have no professional crooks to speak of in Indianapolis,” said Worley. “It is comparatively easy to spot them and drive them out. i But it's not so easy to keep track of the constant raw recruits. being added to crookdom's army. The type of most of the crimes clearly j shows that they are committed by i desperate, heedless youngsters.” From Jan. 1 to 5 p. m. Monday,' police listed $344,813 worth of prop- | erty stolen in the city, of which $284,895 was recovered. This left I $59,918 as net profit for the crooks. During the same period last year, $330,932 was stolen and $281,917 recovered, leaving $49,015 in the hands of thieves. The department has recovered $2,978 more so far this year. Number of Thefts lip The number of thefts has inincreased with the loot. So far this year, 1,393 thefts have been investigated, 118 more than during the first fifty-seven days of 1927. Since Jan. 1, police have cleared up, by arrests or property recovery, 1,186 cases, 120 more than last year. Burglaries have increased, but robberies decreased, tribute to Worley's policy of keeping roving squads on the streets at night. The burglaries this year have totalled 298, compared with 214 last year. Robberies have dropped from 126 last year to 114 this year. Automobiles continue to be the easiest property stolen. To date 527 cars have been reported taken, of which 487 have been recovered. Last year 539 cars were stolen and 479 recovered, the police showing imwtovement in this line. Police not only have recovered more stolen property this year, but have arrested more persons in theft cases. This year’s arrest total is 519, compared with last year’s 457. FAIL IN PHONE APPEAL Judge Chamberlin Rules He Has No Authority in Purchase Case. Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin ruled Monday that he has no authority to pass on an appeal of the Associated Telephone Company from an order of the State Public Service Commission, denying authority to purchase fourteen small telephone companies in 'northern Indiana. When the State commission denied the request in July, the company appealed to Circuit Court, where new evidence was introduced. Judge Chamberlin submitted it to the State which reaffirmed its original opinion. The State provides that an appeal may be taken into the Circuit Court of the county affected by the order, Judge Chamberlin held Monday. He claimed Marion County is not the place for the appeal. WINS STATE CAMPAIGN Vermillion Farm Bureau Honored Today at Newport State farm bureau officers participated today in an all day program at Newport for presentation of an American flag to the Vermillion County Farm Bureau earned by canvassing every county in the State for membership. Five hundred members were obtained compared with 361 last year. Women of the county received a purple and gold banner for obtaining more members than any other county in the Fifth district. State officers present included L. L. Needier, secretary; W. T. Martindale, organization director; Lewis Taylor, taxation division director; Mrs. Verna L. Hatch, social and educational director, and Oscar Larm, Fifth district director.

Entered as Second-class Mat ter at Postoffice. Indlananol^-

Political Boss Who Loves Bridge, Drama Backs Hoover

graduate and a Uw- f*' rou&h student of ' > law and the drama. |||. W prediction * - Maurice Maschke (§ot \ps Vilest thrill * "i/ * f ' iti 1927 when his bridge championship

‘DRUGLESS’ HEALERS £UE FOR LICENSES

COFFIN, DODSON HIT Butler Professor Sees End ot ‘Political Piracy.’ Political buccaneering of George V. Coffin, Republican county and city chairman, and Charles O. Dodson, Coffin's rival for political supremacy, is ended, said Prof. Howard E. Jensen of Butler University, addressing the Irvington Republican Club at the Irvington Masonic Temple Monday night. “There has been a pirate ship on the political waters of Indianapolis," said Professor Jensen, “and it has floated the flag of Coffin and Dodson. Thank God that ship has been scuttled and is going down in the mudddy waters and soon will be forgotten forever.” Professor Jenson discussed in the. last of a series of addresses on government problems, the changing sphere of woman's activities in the modern social system. But he deviated from his topic to comment on “politics by bosses” and to declare that “success of the city manager form of city government depends upon an awakened citizenship.” At the meeting. State Senator Robert L. Moorhead, announced his candidacy for renomination, and John L. Niblack. deputy prosecutor, announced his candidacy for nomination as State Senator. Both expressed favor for the city manager form of government and pledged cooperation to bring about its successful operation. BUS ORDER IS DELAYED Unification of Central Line Postponed Until March 15. Unification of the Central Ave. bus lines into one through line to Sixty-First St., which was ordered Saturday by the. public service commission to go into effect March 1, has been postponed until March 15. The extension is granted, the commission said, in order to enable the People’s Motor Coach Company to comply fully with all the terms of the order. GARRICK THEATER SOLD Zaring to Install Pipe Organ and Redecorate Building. Purchase of the Garrick Theater, Thirtieth and Illinois Sts., was announced today by A. C. Zaring, president of the Griffin Investment Company. Zaring said the company bought the whole stock of $15,000. Sale was effective Feb. 17. Lease on the building was transferred from the Fairbanks heirs to the Griffin company. Zaring plans to install anew pipe organ and redecorate the building. Fred Rusch, associated with Zaring in the company, will manage the house.

BY ISRAEL KLEIN Science Editor, NEA Service \ NEW kind of radio vacuum tube may become more of a boon to the medical profession than to the Industry for which it was originally designed. Looking innocent enough in Its wooden cage and surrounded by a network of wires, condensers and meters, the tube has been found to send out peculiar emanations that light an electric lamp without connecting wires, blister a hand on cold copper wire, cook a steak, light the end of a copper bar, and, most signi*

The Indianapolis Times

Seek to Force State Board to Issue Permits: Briggs Wins Release. Suits to force issuanace of a Slate license to a graduate of the College cf Drugless Physicians, the head of which is under Federal, indictment, and to a graduate of an Elgin dll.) osteopathic school, were filed today In Superior Court One. The suits, brought by Kiel Eugene Crum. 919 Woodlawn Ave., Indianapolis, graduate of the “drugless'' college, and Lawrence Sylvester Weaver. 1014 Garfield Ave., Elkhart, graduate of the Illinois school, are directed against the State board of medical examiners. Briggs Wins Release Meanwhile, head of the city school. Otis J. Briggs, 233 E. St. Joseph St., was released on his own recognizance pending his trial on State charges of suborning perjury. His bond of SSOO h: and been signed by Louis Brown Jr.. 326 E. Pearl St. Both suits were filed by William H. Faust, 204 Hume-Mansur Bldg. Weaver's petition attached a copy of a letter from the State board, signed by E. M. Shanklin, secretary, to the efiect that an investigation of the Murray Institute of Elgin revealed it is a correspondence school only. The Federal indictment against Briggs charges operation of a “diploma mill” and the use of the mails in its furtherance. State's Witness IU Briggs' release from bond by Criminal Judge James A. Collins, before whom the charges are pending following delay of several months in • the trial. Twice the State was ready for trial, and continuances were granted the defense, Deputy Prosecutor John L. Niblack told the court. Since that time the State's chief witness, Henrietta Sing of Greensburg, has become ill, and State is seeking a delay. Briggs is insisting on trial, Niblack said. It is the Greensburg woman, who posed as a Hindoo, who filed the affidavit with the State for license to practice, which caused Briggs’ arrest for suborning perjury. She attended his school. 11 HELD FOR GAMBLING Charged With Using Race Results for Money Wagers. While a telegraph instrument was telling the story of horse races at Havana and other winter tracks, police raided rooms at 109 Kentucky Ave. Monday night, and arrested eleven men and charged them with using the results to gamble. Irvin Goldman, 25, of Spink Hotel, and Fred Kromer, 24, of Grand Hotel, the latter at the telegraph instrument, were charged with keeping the gaming house. Nine other men, two of them Negroes, were arrested. Lieut. Ralph Dean led the raiding squad.

NEW FEVER-PRODUCING RADIO TUBE MAY PROVE MEDICAL BOON

ficant of all, start a fever in the human body. It is this last phenomenon that is taken seriously by the designers of the tube and physicians who have seen it in action. Tests are being made with rats and other animals to determine its ultimate effect on life. an THE tube is the work of engineers in the laboratories of the General Electric Company in Schenectady, N. Y. They had originally sought a radio vacuum tube that would operate on a low wavelength at

INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, FEB. 28, 1928

/>' ii MIA Service CLEVELAND, Ohio, Feb. 28.—Because of an American auction bridge champion’s regard for Representative Theodore E. Burton, Ohio is once more an important battle ground in a pre-presidential campaign. Maurice Maschke, the man who tipped over the political apple cart in Ohio by his decision to support Herbert Hoover against Senator Frank B. Willis in the Ohio primaries, tells you that the prospect of opposing Burton in his “last political fight” was abhorrent to him. “I have been a consistent follower of Burton ever since I have been in politics,” says Maschke. “He found an issue in Senator Willis, and that, more than any other reason, is why I am supporting Herbert Hoover, for Burton's fight on Willis, I believe, will be his last political fight.” Although Maschke has been in politics since 1895 and for a good deal of that time has controlled Republican politics in and around Cleveland, he is a strange figure of a political boss —strange, that is, when measured m terms of the popular conception of a political boss. Ban a a a HARVARD graduate, lawyer, keen student of the drama and one of the finest bridge players in the country. He doesn’t smoke cigars, he doesn't wear fancy vests and he refuses to make speeches—probably because he is such a poor speaker.

Clear the Way Claude Mathews, 34. of 2317 W. Morris St., wanted to cross the Big Four tracks at S. Hohr.es Ave. in his automobile Monday night. A freight train was in his way. He speeded his machine and knocked the freight train off the tracks. Today he faces charges of driving while intoxicated. According to Otto Streis, 43, of 2234 N. LaSalle St., conductor on the train, the trucks were knocked from beneath one of the cars and eight were derailed before the engineer could be notified. John Cowell. 60, of Mansfield, Ohio, a passenger with Mathews was charged with intoxication and operating a blind tiger. Police allege that he had a half pint of liquor with him.

PRISON TERM WON BY PITY Sentence Man Who Escaped Chair as Slayer. By l >iitr<l I'rrss NEW YORK. Feb. 28 —Francesco Caruso, who escaped the electric chair, because everybody pitied him, was sentenced today to ten to twenty years in prison for killing Dr. Carper Pcndola. Sentence was imposed by County Judge McLaughlin in Brooklyn. Caruso, an illiterate Italian laborer, killed Pendaoia, because he blamed him for the death by diphtheria of his son. Joseph. 6. Caruso thought anti-toxin injected by the doctor had something to do with the death. Caruso was sentenced to die, but Clarence Darrow. Arthur Garfield Hays and other prominent persons interested themselves in his behalf, insisting that his offense was not j first degree murder, but r crime of sudden passion, due more to ignorance than criminal intent. The court of appeals at Albany reversed the conviction and he was given anew trial, at which he pleaded guilty to manslaughter. TEACHERS MAY SPANK CHILDREN. JUDGE RULES Has Same Right as Parents, Is Decision in Whipping Case. Marion County school pupils will ; not be spoiled by sparing the rod, 1 if discipline is based on a decision in the school whipping case handed down Monday by Municipal Judge Clifford R. Cameron. Parents of 8-year-old James King, 4817 Caroline Ave., had Miss Florence Brant, second-grade teacher at Washington School, arrested for whipping James, who is one of her pupils. She admitted giving him several resounding whacks with a paddle on the seat of his pants. It was contended that he had been bruised. “A school teacher has the same right to chastise unruly children as parents,” Judge Cameron declared, in dismissing the charges. “Punishment is not proved unjust or cruel because pain was induced and abrasions of the skin caused.” URGES NEW NAMES ON STATE G. 0. P. TICKET John W. Becker Speaker to Irvington Republicans. New names should appear on the Republican ticket displacing “stale politicians,” John W. Becker, candidate for the Republican nomination for Congressman of the Seventh District, told the Irvington Republican Club, Inc., Monday night at Carr's Hall. Becker said agriculture should be given the protection such as has been afforded the manufacturing industry. Other speakers included Charles Mendenhall, candidate for the nomination as Marion County prosecutor; William J. Heim and Luther E. Tex, county road superintendent. Heim, William Hogle and Dr. Samuel McGaughey were appointed to divide the club roster into precincts.

high power, a combination heretofore found extremely difficult. They have achieved their goal, but at the same time they have produced a device that may be more beneficial to medical science than to radio. Operating on the low’ wavelength of six meters, the new’ tube is capable of radiating fro;n 10,009 to 15,000 watts of power, probably 50 times as great as any short-wave tube has heretofore been able to produce. It is a big step in the development of short wave radio trans-

11 REED IS INDORSED M HOME STATE Missouri Democrats Boom Senator as Candidate for Presidency. Bii I nilid Bren* ST. JOSEPH. Mo., Feb. 28.—The j name of Senator James A. Reed of I Missouri was presented to the assembled Democrats of his home State today for their indorsement of his presidential candidacy. Picturing the militant Senator as “a crusader wno will lead our party to an historic victory,” former Governor Frederick D. Gardner urged the Missouri Democratic State convention to throw its strength behind the movement to put Senator Reed j into the White House. Gardner gave the keynote speech jof the convention. Reviewing the famous “Newoerry scandal,” the fight against the seating of Frank L. Smith of Illinois and Reed's part <4n “exposing in Pennsylvania corruption which shocked the United States and astounded the world,” he added: “It was his courage, his ability, which exposed the intolerable system of purchasing seats in the United States Senate.” Courage Fraised “The great issue of this campaign," Gardner continued, “is taking control of the Federal Government from the evil and corrupt influences which for eight years have possessed it. and returning that con- j trol to the people of the United | States.” Gardner praised Reed's record as a champion of "individual freedom’’ j and his conscientious service to the [ State. “In every great conflict he has i been in the forefront.” he said. “Constantly, persistently. Reed has asserted that the sole object of government is the happiness of the people. Champions State Rights “He has stood for the independence cf the individual citizen. He has championed the doctrine that States know better than the representatives of ether States a thousand miles away how r to manage their internal affairs. “It is now to be determined whether v.e can check those increasing Federal assaults upon local self-government and re-establish the vital principle of our original dual system, or whether our States and all of their responsible political subdivisions are to be engulfed in a consolidated bureaucratic despotism, ruled from Washington.”

MISSING GIRL FOUND, PLACED UNDER ARREST Miss Evelyn Welch, 18, Charged With Vagrancy After Raid. Miss Evelyn Welch. 18. of 1310 Harlan St., who has been missing since Feb. 18. was found by police this morning when they raided the home of Miss Martha Roe. 124 W. Twelfth St. Sergt. John Isenhut, In charge of the raid, took the girl on a vagrancy charge. She was alone in the place when the raid took place. Miss Welch, who was employed at a South St. factory sent her money home to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Welch, by a friend a week ago Saturday. Later she sent them a letter saying that she was going to Detroit. An alleged long distance call the following week assured them that she was in the Michigan city. No trace of the girl had been found until this morning. A small quantity of liquor was taken from the Roe place in. the raid. Million Left to Chauffeur By United Press POTTSVILLE. Pa.. Feb. 28. Fidelity was rewarded generously when Miss Ermine C. Elssler left her entire estate, worth nearly a million doilars, to James J. Curran, who had served her as chauffeur for three years.

mission, on which engineers have been intensively engaged for several years. u tx a "ITTHAT claimed the attention * * of medical scientists was the action of the tube on the men who happened to be experimenting with it. They felt a warm glow' go through their bodies, increasing in warmth as they got nearer. Measurements were taken of the changes in bodily temperature as the men approached the tube. and it was found that the blood

And yet he is one of the shrewdest politicians in the country, an astute Warwick the answer to whose success lies in his ability to perfect a smooth-rolling local machine. He is Republican national committeeman from Ohio, but that means little to him. Far more important is the fact that last year, at Hanover, N. H., the Cleveland auction bridge team, composed of Carl T. Robertson, Henry P. Jaeger, Carl Apthorp and Maurice Maschke won the American championship. That, he tells you, was the biggest “kick” he ever got. In 1886 Maurice Maschke was graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy. Four years later he got his degree at Harvard. He read law in a law office was admitted to the bar, but he does little actual practicing. Early in his political career he held the office of county recorder, and later he was appointed collector of customs by William Howard Taft, then President. But he cares nothing for political office. He likes politics, he says, because he likes the “thrill of political victory.” This strange political boss is a devout follower of the drama. Much of it he reads in book form. “I'm confident Hoover will win,” he announced just prior to his departure for a vacation in Havana. His wife and daughter, Helen, accompanied him. Maurice Maschke, Jr., a graduate of Phillips Exeter, is now* a sophomore in Harvard and couldn’t go along.

Plan to Fly Round Horn

fuMTFn

The first men to fly around Cape Horn in an airplane may be the • two pictured here. James C. Angel, lower left, and Presho Stephenson intend to take off from Fresno, Cal., in March. Here is the ship which they will use and the 25,000-mile route they intend to follow.

DOGGY SPRING GARB COSTS ONLY $2,283

BY PAUL WHITE, lalltd Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK. Feb. 28.—'The welldressed man. if he desires to continue that way this spring, may do so with the expenditure of only $2,283. That amount will purchase a vernal wardrobe practically complete in every detail, it was decreed today by an official of the New York Custom Cutter's Club, holding its

CLOTHES PROP USED BY BURGLAR TO GET PURSE Loot of 49 Cents Taken In Raid on Grocery Store. Using a nine-foot clothes line prop, a burglar hooked Mrs. Gertrude's Parsley’s purse from the bed in her apartment at 328 E. Walnut St., Monday night. The purse contained $5.75 and some trinkets. Forty-nine cents was the loot taken from the Max Kolloek grocery, 1725 Northwestern Ave., Monday night. Police think the robbers were boys. One of the checks stolen from the Southern Coal Company last week turned up at the Zink meat market, 2127 N. Illinois St., Monday. A woman giving the name of Mrs. Rose Angelo of 1919 N. Illinois St., passed it for $25. Police said more than 100 blank checks had been stolen from the company and forgeries were expected. One Dies in Auto-Bus Crash By Times Special GARY, Ind., Feb. 28.—W. C. Wilson, Hobart, is dead and seven companions -who were riding with him in an automobile w'hen it was struck by a bus are suffering from injuries. The accident occurred on industrial highway near here.

temperature rose to nearly 100 degrees, Fahrenheit, in about fifteen minutes. Experimental rats were put into the field of the tube. At first they became highly excited, but after a lengthy exposure they died. Fruit flies also have been studied under the influence of the tube and experiments with cats are now being made. hub -pvR. W. R. WHITNEY, director of the General Electric Research Laboratory, is wary of predicting the possible uses or

Second Section

Full Leased Wire Service oi the United Press Association.

annual style show at the Hotel Commodore. Below is a budget, prepared for a young man whose only recreation is golf. Os course, if he goes in for polo, tennis, archery and fly-cast-ing. his clothing equipment naturally will be more costly. Thus the limitation and here the budget. First are suits and overcoats: Formal evening- dress, $150; Tuxedo. 5135; formal day dress, $125; informal day dress, $115; five business suits, three of them double-breasted, $500; two sport suits, $180; dress overcoat, $150; business overcoat, $125; sport coat, $100; ulster, slls. This total is $1,695. Then there are shoes, to cost as follows: Evening footgear. $17.50; informal evening. sls; business (three pairs), $45; sport (two pairs), $35. Total, $112.50. And hats, too: Silk “Topper,” S2O; “Bowder,” $10; two soft, for business, S2O; sport hat or cap, $lO. Total S6O. Accessories: Underwear, six suits, S3O; socks, 12 pairs, $18; golf hose, three pair, sls; golf sweaters, two pairs, S3O; cravats, dozen, S3O; canes, three, SSO; pajamas (silk) four suits, $80; shirts, two dozen, $100; belts, three, $12.50. Total, $365.50. Incidentals, such as kerchiefs, spats, suspenders, etc., will cost SSO, making the grand total $2,283. PROWLER SLIPS POLICE Although C. C. Marsh, building manager of the Continental Bank Bldg., told police Monday night that he had seen a prowler on three different floors, they were unable to find trace of him. A safe was opened in the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, Room 603, Sunday night, and Marsh was on the lookout for a return of the burglar Monday night.

benefits from this tube, but he already sees great promise in it for the cure, or relief, from certain diseases through a rising blood temperature. Only recently Prof. J. C. McLennan of the University of Toronto reported experiments with the use of long radio waves for raising the temperature cf the blood in order to destroy diseaseforming organisms. He found this especially hopeful in creating a fever immediately after the crisis in pneumonia, and so overcome the inability of the body to raise its own temperature.

FLIERS TO GO AROUND HORN TO AID PEACE Pair Will Hop Off Soon on 25,000-Mile Tour to Win Good-Will. FRESNO STARTING POINT i Many Dangers Faced by l Intrepid Airmen on Long Journey. By JAMES C. ANGEL Written for NEA Service and The Times GAN DIEGO, Cal.. Feb. 28. Around the horn in an airplane! In a few weeks, now, we are goin# to set sail in a twentieth century ship for the far-southern straits that Magellan discovered In 1520. Since then many a square-rigger has passed through them on its way to the Pacific, but no airplane has made the trip. Presho Stephenson is going with me as co-pilot. In a way we are seeking to add to what Col. Charles A. Lindbergh already has accomplished for the peace and prosperity of the western hemisphere. We want to demonstrate the practicability of connecting the United States by air with the countries to the south. Get Young Backer When I mentioned the idea to F. W. Hemingway, president of Beacon Airways, he immediately agreed to arrange the trip. Hemingway is a young man. An older one might have hesitated, pointed out the dangers of a 25,000 mile flight. But I have flown over Mexico and South America, know the terrain in a general way, and am sure that we should have little difficulty. Our first hop will be a non-stop from Fresno to Mexico City, a distance of 1.750 miles. We expect to complete this between dawn and night, in about 10 hours. The plane, equipped as it will be for the flight, already has flown 200 miles an hour. Such speeds in the air are neither impractical nor unreasonable. We also will attempt to make the complete circuit of 25,000 miles without carrying spare parts for the motor. That might sound foolhardy, but it is not. Trip to Be 250 Hours A motor of the type we selected has run continuously for 400 hours at three-fourths speed. Our total flying time oir the trip should not exceed 250 hours. The ship we will use is a special Fokker biplane equipped with a 300-horsepower Hall motor. This power plant is six-cylinder design, is water cooled, and has several new features which should make for smooth performance. We will have a radio set capable of transmitting messages 12.000 miles. It was designed by William Eitel, a young inventor living near Fresno. Radio to Give Speed The radio will send our air speed automatically from a wind-driven generator. Thus our progress, in the form our speed and call letters, may be followed by the world from day to day. When we take off from the municipal airport at Fresno we will have in our tanks 157 gallons of gasoline and ten gallons of lubricating oil. Wc will fly a direct course down California, across the Salton sea and the International border at Calexico and dash for the capital of Mexico. For at least 1,000 miles we will fly over country where an airplane with the high landing speed of seventy-five miles an hour cannot land. We must stay in the air. Familiar Routes After Mexico City, our first hop will carry us down the Mexican air mail route to Tampico. Many times I have flown that course, carrying the air mail and oil companies’ pay rolls. During daylight hours we will hop on from Tampico to Vera Cruz —to Guatemala—to Costa Rica—to Panama—to Colombia—to Bolivia to Paraguay—to Argentina—to the Straits of Magellan, 2.000 miles (in two jumps)—to Patagonia—then on to Chile—to Peru —to Ecuador—to Panama—and home. Thus we hope to ocmplete in two months a gigantic figure eight, whose lines measure nearly 25.0)0 miles, or the circumference of the globe. MAN’S QUEST FOR GOD The Rt. Rev. W. L. Rogers Speak* at Christ Church. “Man's quest is to find God,” the Rt. Rev. Warren L. Rogers, Cleveland, bishop coadjutor of the Ohio Episcopal diocese, said at the opening of the second week's series of noon Lenten services at Christ Church. “Man can do three thin,.. in his search for God. First, seek Him with his whole heart; second, think of Him as being near, and third, be a companion of His in doing good.’* Cops Censor Show as Offensive Sergt. Harley Jones inaugurated police censorship at Lincoln Square Theater Monday night. Reviewing the show with Manager Edward Galligan, he ordered two acts cut out as being offensive. Sergt. Curtiss Barge later visited the show and said the acts had been removed, but there was disorderly conduct in the balcony.