Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 270, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1928 — Page 11

Second Section

INDUSTRY AT MARION WILL BEMGED Lindley Box and Paper Company to Add 100,000 i Feet to Floor Space. < MEN RETURN TO WORK Glass Plant at Terre Haute Reopens With 150 Back on Jobs. BY CHARLES C. STONE State Editor, The Times Announcement of an expansion program by the Lindley Box and Paper Company, Marion, is one of several encouraging factors in an industrial and business survey of Indiana for the past week completed today. The Lindley company will build a plant addition with 100,000 square feet of floor space to accommodate making of an addition to its line, that of corrugated paper products. Twenty-five persons will comprise the force at the start with a weekly pay roll of $750. Plant Moved to South Bend South Bend has obtained the plant of the Electric Sprayit Company, which is being moved from Detroit, Mich., and plans to begin operations March 15. Seventy-five jto 100 persons will be employed. Operations have been resumed by the Root Glass Company, Terre Haute, after a two weeks shutdown, enabling 150 men to return to work. After several months idleness, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad shops lit Washington are again in operation, giving employment to 137 men. An overall factory at Monticello idle for several months, is operating with a force of twenty-five. Owners of the plant announce they hope to increase the force soon. The Hicks Body Company, Lebanon. is filling an order for fifty school bus bodies. Sets $1,000,000 Goal A goal of $1,000,000 for 1928 business has been set by Noblitt-Sparks Industries, Inc., which has plants at Columbus and Greenwood. Other data obtained in the week’s survey follows: PORTLAND —Heads of industries here are optimistic over 1928 prospects. Among officials making forecasts are those of the Bimel Spoke and Auto Wheel Company; Drop Forge Company, Sheller Wood Rim Company, Jay Garment Company and Stevenson Overall Company, TERRE HAUTE—Drilling for four new oil wells is planned in the district south of here by the Siosi Oil Company, C. E. Poyer, vice president announces. A union stockyards, the first in Terre Haute’s history, will be opened Saturday. Present facilities permit housng of fifty carloads of stock. LINTON—CoaI mine stripping operations are to start soon on a 300-acre tract near here, bought recently near Jasonville, Clay City, Gilmore and Oakland City. Purchase of the land involved expenditure of $50,000. EVANSVILLE!—This city is to be the headquarters of the Interstate Association, which is engaged on a large scale in development of the oil field in Kentucky counties across the Ohio River from Indiana. COLUMBUS Operations have started at anew planing mill owned hy R. Lee and Valentine Wendel. Builds Boat for Government JEFFERSONVILLE—The Howard Shipyard and Dock Company hat started construction of a dredge boat for the United States Government. First production of furniture, a line unique for a company of its kind, is being exhibited by the local plant of the American Car and Foundry Company. Carrying the fine cabinet work done on railroad coaches into the new line, the company hopes to give Jeffersonville a prominent place soon among the nation's furniture cities. SOUTH BEND—The Studebaker Corporation here has received an order by trans-Atlantic telephone from The Hague, Holland, for SIOO,000 worth of automobiles. L. W. Manson, Studebaker distributor at The Hague, gave the order. MISHAWAKA—An ice cream factory is to be established here by a $50,000 company, including three Ft. Wayne men—Andrew and H. J. Muldoon and A. D. Rauner. The company also plans establishment of plants at South Bend and Elkhart. Ft. Wayne Advertises FT. WAYNE—This city’s good points from a business and industrial standpoint are being broadcast every Thursday evening from radio station WOWO and will continue until early in June. PRINCETON—A new theater and business building to cost between $125,000 and $150,000 is to be erected by the recently formed Gibson Hotel and Realty Company. SHARPSVILLE Production is being steadily increased at the Kraft Cheese Company factory here. At present the plant is handling milk from 1,100 cows. ANDERSON—The Fame Canning Company’s local plant, idle last year, is to be improved and opened for an active season this year. Twenty per cent more com than in the past is being contracted for at an increase in price. DUGGER—The Sunflower coal mine near here is again in operation following a shutdown to permit repairs following an explosion. MT. VERNON—The Mt. Vernon Strawboard Company plant is being operated at peak production. For February, the output was sixtyeight and one-half tons, anew monthly record.

Entered as Second-class Mv> ter at Postofflce, Indianapolis

Halt Industry at Grave Edge

Bit United Press CHICAGO, March B.—Located in what now is a rich industrial district in South Chicago, a grave surrounded by a low white fence, has restricted for 73 years sale of a tract of land valued at a half million dollars, it was disclosed here today. Andrea Zirngibl died in 1855 and was buried in a 71-acre tract of land he owned. He requested that his grave be preserved and that his body never be moved. This tract now is surrounded on all sides by industry, steel mills and industrial plants being built up to the very edge of the sacred ground.

FIGHT LOOMS ON CEMETERY Opposition to Negro Burial Ground Expected. Request of the H. B. Fatout Company, engineers and designers, to plat a Negro cemetery between Ralston and Hillside Aves. and Belt Railroad and Twenty-Third St., is expected to be the center of a fight before the city plan commission April 3. The plan commission set the April date for a public hearing on the case. A group of property owners on Hillside Ave. are understood to be opposed to the proposed burial ground. The tract would accommodate 33,000 burials, according to the plat before the commission. Herbert Bloemker, Fatout company representative, filed the plat Tuesday. At present Negroes are buried in a section of Crown Hill Cemetery, according to Macklin Mack, plan body secretary. Mack said a committee of plan commission members probably would view the site before the next meeting. LEGALITY OF COLISEUM STEPS CHALLENGED Suspend Board Activities Pending Probe by City. Coliseum board activities were suspended today pending an investigation of the legality of the coliseum board of managers, named last June by former Mayor John L. Duvall. Action will be withheld thirty days or longer if legal complications affecting the operation of the board can not be cleared. Mayor L. Ert Slack, opposed to erecting a coliseum at present, announced last week that he questioned the legality of the coliseum board's appointment and all its activities because there is no record of the board of works having adopted a resolution declaring that the city proceed to erect a coliseum. Slack and board members are said to have clashed at recent secret conferences in the mayor's office. Legion of Honor Expels Flier Bn United Press PARIS, March B.—The Petit Parisian announced today that the Council of Legion of Honor had expelled the French aviator, Caluzzo, because of his announcement that he has established a world’s altitude record, subsequently learned to be fraudulent.

COUNTY DELEGATES ARE APPORTIONED

* Marion county’s 126 delegates to the State Republican convention and 105 to the Democratic were apportioned to precincts and townships Wednesday by the county board of election commissioners. The number was set recently by the State board of election commissioners. The number is arrived at by the vote cast in the preceding election for the office of secretary

Nice Fire! By Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., March B.—“ Chip" Lewis, Indianapolis Negro, was acquitted in city court here of a charge of violating the prohibition law when it was disclosed that evidence taken in a raid was destroyed in a fire which razed the city hall here two months ago. The raid was made at a hotel Lewis conducted.

DURANT WRONG ENTIRELY ON LOVE'S DEADLINE, DECLARES DR. ARTHUR PAYNE

DR. ARTHUR FRANK PAYNE In the field of philosophy, Dr. Will Durant has done a great work in popularizing his specialty. He has done more than a generation of college professors of philosophy in giving to the mass’of people an understandable notion of philosophy. But, when he steps out of the field in which he is an expert, he is just as likely to make a chump of himself as the rest of us. Recently he made the extraordinary statement that "A man past thirty is incapable of love.” In any discussion of the question of love, Dr. Durant rates as an amateur. He attempts to define "Love.” It can not be done. The reason for this Is that we can not talk, think or reason about “Love” until w'e have classified “Loves.” There are many kinds of “Love” —some ennobling, some debasing.

The Indianapolis Times

In the center of the ground, the white fence inclosure stands out strangely in contrast to the smoke stacks and hum of industrial activity. Close observance shows that the grave is well cared for. For several feet on all sides of the grave, the grass always is kept cut short. A small marble tablet with a white cross atop bears the name of Zirngibl. The white picket fence is painted each year. Zirngibl’s request has been respected throughout the seventythree years by his relatives. Although the land has been offered

Rubber Sox! Oh, Rubber!

The mud-splashing motorist has been thwarted. Modem maids wear the same kind of material in her hose your Uncle Wilbur used to wear in his collars—which is to say rubber. Mildred Bossone of Philadelphia is wearing a pair of the rubberized stockings while her sister, Rose, is shown testing them by pouring water.

BALK AT EXPENSE . OF LANG ARREST

By Times Special SULLIVAN, Ind., March B.—Directors of the closed Citizens Trust Company here, apparently are not sufficiently interested in James M. Lang, 73, its absconding president, to pay expense of arresting him. After a reward of SIO,OOO for Lang's arrest had been posted, didectors withdraw it when advised by Ben C. Crowder, temporary receiver, that arrest .expenses would come out of their pockets.

of State, each 400 votes allowing one delegate. The apportionment follows: Repub- Demolican. cratlc. Second Ward 10 6 Third Ward 6 5 Fourth Ward 17 12 Firth Ward 3 2 Sixth Ward 2 2 Seventh Ward 4 3 Eighth Ward 5 4 Ninth Ward 13 13 Tenth Ward 8 7 Eleventh Ward 33 Twelfth Ward ....• 1 2 Thirteenth Ward 6 7 Fourteenth Ward 2 2 Fifteenth Ward 1 Center Township (outside) 1 1 Franklin Township 2 1 Pike Township 1 Lawrence Township 1 2 Warren Township 7 5 Perrv Township 4 3 Decatur Township 1 Wayne Township 9 8 Washington Township .... 11 9 126 105 Ira M. Holmes, attorney, was named chairman of the board at an organization meeting prior to the apportionment. George Hutsell as county clerk is ex-officio member and secretary. The Democratic member is James E. Deery, attorney George V. Coffin, County Republican chairman, and Leroy J. Keach, holding a similar post in the Democratic party, attended.

Some that last twenty-four hours, and some that last throughout life and even beyond. One kind of love Is so full of sacrifice that the lover might give up the person loved to another. Another kind of love is so brutal and selfish, that it ruins the body and soul of the person loved. Freedom In greatest measure may be the result of one kind of love; slavery and degradation the result of another. Dr. Durant does not specify which love he is talking about. Love is no respecter of ages. One type of love may be impossible for the young boy or girl of sixteen, and at the same time they may be consumed with another kind. The man or woman of sixty (twice Durant’s thirty) may enter upon, and experience a love that Is so fine, inspiring and wonderful, that it alone justifies the entire life of the lover and the loved.

INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1928

for sale, a restriction has been placed in the offer which would require the purchaser to agree to provide a passageway to and from the street and grave. The land would make an excellent site for an industrial enterprise. Railroad tracks run along one side and a canal on another, with facilities for a dock available. The restriction for preservation of the grave will not be lifted and the real estate company handling the property must insist on the stipulation in any sales agreement made, relatives declared.

Mrs. Louise Campbell, a nurse, Is being sought at Evansville by Sullivan authorities who want to question her about the disappearance of Lang, missing since Feb. 2. The woman arrived in Evansville Tuesday, and in an inteview with newspaper men denied she was with Lang at Ponca City, Okla., where he was last seen. The Sullivan officers have not yet located her. At a nurses’ home where she registered with Alice Benson, another nurse, it was said Wednesday Mrs. Campbell was “out.” Lang’s name and that of a nurse at Mary Sherman Hospital, Sullivan, were linked in a story of the case this week. Another "woman in the case,” Mrs. Pearl Cozart, operated a hotel at Ponca City, where Lang stayed since he left Sullivan. She was formerly Pearl Long and married Cozart, a stock salesman, ten years ago. He swindled Sullivan County citizens of SIOO,OOO in the Tishimingo Tie Company stock selling case, and was given a Federal prison term. Although Lang’s associates declare he had no part in the tie company stock selling, they admit Lang told them he bought diamonds from Mrs. Cozart on the installment plan and that she was a frequent visitor at the Citizens Trust Bank before she left for Oklahoma open a hotel. SOUTH CALLS COOLIDGE North Carolina Mountain Estate Offered for Vacation. Bit United Press WASHINGTON, March B.—President Coolidge was invited today to spend his summer vacation at Zelandia, the 100-acre mountain estate of Philip S. Henry, near Asheville, N. C. The invitation was extended by Henry and Senator Overman of North Carolina.

Biologists and physiologists agree that the average man does not reach his prime of fullest development until the age of forty. Durant intimates that he is all through at thirty. Unless one can love, one can not really love. Love is the greatest of all outlets. God help the person who is not loving something or someone. At all ages we have the overwhelming wish to belong to, to be attached to, to love someone else, to need and be needed. This, regardless of age, is the foundation of all and of any kind of happiness. It would be quite difficult to make a statement of any kind that could be so completely and fundamentally wrong as the statement that, “A man past thirty is incapable of love.” First, we have the love of a child for its mother. This is based on dependency, and becomes an evil thing if it continues in the form until manhood. It then becomes a mother fixation. It should

LEWIS SEES RAIL PLOT TO WRECKUNIONS Bicknell Fields Idle by Reason of Pennsy’s Stand, He Says. FORCES MINE CLOSING Other Roads Join in Plan to Ruin Workers, Chief Tells Senators. By Times Special WASHINGTON, March B.—Unemployment conditions in the Bicknell. Ind., coal fields are cited as th most striking single example of the alleged railroad conspiracy against union coal miners by John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, before the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee. The Pennsylvania Railroad, he said, wouldn't buy "a ton of Knox County coal" except at greatly depressed prices, and as a result the mines are "not turning a wheel.” He named the Knox Consolidated Coal Company as the chief sufferer from the road's action. This company had refused to depress its prices as demanded, he said, and had suffered a complete loss of the railroad’s business. The company Instead is nauling coal for use on its Indiana division from Ohio. Kentucky and West Virginia instead of using Indiana coal, in the belief of the Miners’ Union, he said. Much Morw Expensive This is naturally much more expensive, because of the long haul, than using Indiana coal, he added. But the policy is being carried out in pursuance of the railroads’ plan to "break" the United Mine Workers. Two officials of the Knox Consolidated Coal Company, Edward Logsdon, president, and H. A. Glover, chairman of the marketing committee, both of Indianapolis, have been subpoenaed to appear before the committee. They have notified the committee they will appear probably Monday. "Asa result of the Pennsylvania’s policy, mines are closed, business men there are going bankrupt and public subscriptions are being raised for the union miners .” Lewis said. "The Pennsylvania is not getting its coal any cheaper, in our opinion, but is looking to the future, in the hope of breaking down our organization in Indiana and later getting coal much cheaper.” Charges Other Roads Join He said the Chicago & St. Paul, the B. & O. and the New York Central had joined in the alleged movement against the miners’ union, and were partially responsible with the Pennsylvania for the present situation In Indiana and Ohio. “The huge surpluses being built up by some of the roads literally are being blackjacked from the muscles of the coal miners and the assets of the coal companies,” he said. Senator Watson of Indiana asked how the roads "worked it.” "The coal business of the railroads is the most important of all, from the standpoint of the coal operators,” Lewis answered. "They play one operator against the other, by exerting this unwarranted power and influence. One operator may be glad to go along, upon being promised steady patronage, and then he is used as a lever upon the others.” Lewis’ testimony on the Indiana situation was elicited by committee members who asked him for examples after he had made his gen-, eral conspiracy charge. It was interjected into his prepared statement.

GENE AND BEAUTY TRADE BOUQUETS

By United Press MIAMI BEACH, Fla., March 8 One of the world’s three most eligible bachelors has met "one of the world’s loveliest girls.” Gene Tunney admitted as much yesterday, when he took Miss Caroline Bishop, Beveily Hills, Cal., to the station and bade her and her aunt, Mrs. Fred Thompson, good-by. Before the train left, these public pronouncements were made:

change gradually until this love in adulthood finds its expression in the dependency of the mother upon the now grown-up child. Second, we have the love of the young child for itself. It begins to express its own individuality. This makes for a difficult time for parents, brothers and sisters. If this sel-love persists to adulthood, it likewise, becomes an evil thing. Third, comes the love of the adolescent boy and girl, in which love is idealized until it amounts to "being in love with love.” This is a fine and beautiful form of love, and should never be made the occasion of coarse or humorous remarks. • • AFTER this period, love may take a variety of forms, depending upon the individual, his Inheritance and environment. It may degenerate into, fourth, a low form of primitive love of sex on an essentially biological or ani-mal-like basis. This gives us our

Mabel Flies at Last Mabel 8011, “queen of diamonds,” who since last summer sought to make a long non-stop airplane flight, has realized her ambition. This is the smile she took with her when she flew from New York to Cuba with Charles A. Levine and Wilmer Stultz in the transAtlantic Bellanca monoplane “Columbia.”

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FORD PLANT HERE TO OPEN IN APRIL; OFFICIALS BELIEVE

Plop! By United Press PRINCETON, Ind., March 8. —Excitement was evidenced in city court here whpn the cork blew out of . bottle said to contain home-brew, introduced as evidence against Roy Cullivan. The cork hit the courtroom ceiling and rebounded. The Jury failed to reach a decision and was dismissed.

DENIES RECEIVER City Demurrers to Burns Suit Sustained. Appointment of a receiver for the city of Indianapolis was refused today by Superior Judge Byron K. Elliott. Elliott sustained the city’s demurrer to the suit of John E. Burns and Roy E. Murphy, as taxpayers, asking a receiver be appointed to take entire charge of city affairs. The suit declared that the litigation as to who is legally mayor has thrown city affairs into confusion; prevented wise management of city business and harmed general business prosperity.

Miss Bishop: “I think Mr. Tunney one of the most admirable men of today, but It seems an unfair strain on our friendship for newspapers to have us engaged every time we are seen together.” Tunney: “Miss Bishop is one of the loveliest girls I ever have known, but it is decidedly premature and unfair to her to suggest that we are betrothed.”

"Don Juans,” the so-called, “lovenests,” and lowest of all, the brothel. It may develop into, fifth, some form of perverted love expression such as we find in the Loeb-Leo-pold and Hickman cases. It may develop into, sixth, inverted love which, with its various modes of expression, is the true cause of so many student suicides. A man or woman may seek any kind of love as an escape from a life of drab reality, unsatisfied longing, or as a surcease from an intolerable situation in which they find themselves. Seventh, and finest of all, is that type of conscience, developed and controlled love, that can come only after the man and woman have arrived at maturity, after they have worked and loved,, attained and failed, gone up to the heights and down into the depths. Then, and only then, is it possible for two human beings to love in that perfect relationship that is

Second Section

Full Leased Wire Service ol the United Press Association.

Several Hundred Men to Get Work if Schedule of Past Is Used. Production will begin next month ut the Ford Motor Car Company assembly plant on E. Washington St., officials of the local Ford plant believe. Although no official word has been received from Ford headquarters, local officials admitted today that they expect to start work here in April. Their expectation is based on the announcement from Detroit Wednesday that seven Ford plants outside Detroit are now in operation and that fifteen plants will be at work by the end of March. Eight hundred men were employed at the local Indianapolis assembly plant when its doors were shut last June, as production of the model T "flivver” was stopped. There is no method of determining how many men opening of the plant will give work, but at least several hundred, if not the entire force or a larger number, will be employed, it is believed. The hope of the local officials that they will resume production in April is based partly on the fact that the Indianapolis assembly is the fifteenth largest in the country. Unofficial word also was received from Chicago recently that the E. Washington St. branch factory is scheduled for opening soon after the first fifteen. Since the new model A flivver was exhibited to the public Dec. 2, the Fords delivered to Indianapolis dealers have been shipped or driven from Detroit and Louisville. The Louisville assembly plant was opened Jan. 10.

Deadline? By United Press DENVER, March B.—“ Leave the men alone after this affair,” was the warning handed down by Judge H. A. Calvert when he granted a decree of divorce to Mrs. Rossi Perillo, 96, from Francesco Perillo, 55.

the most deep-seated desire of all human beings. tt tt tt r TPHIS is the kind of love that -*■ brings us nearer to our God, or whatever kind of God we may have created for ourselves. It is the most God-like thing of which human-kind is capable. And this greatest of all blessings that can come to suffering hu-man-kind is possible only to those who have reached maturity, who have had time to live and to love, to give and to get, who have had the cup of happiness held to their lips and had it dashed away again, who have seen others drinking of this blessed cup while they were parched with thirst. This can be possible only to mature adults of above thirty. Dr. Durant is most completely and emphatically wrong the statement should read, "A man under thirty is incapable of the highest form of love.” (Copyright 1828, Bell Syndicate, Inc.)

BUTLER STAND CRASH STARTS SAFETY DRIVE Authorities Take Steps to Prevent Any Collapse at School Tourney. 500 IN BLEACHER DROP Thawing of Ground Given as Reason for Mishap by Officials. Steps to prevent collapse of temporary bleachers at the new Butler field house during the final State high school basketball tournament, March 16 and 17, were taken by three sets of authorities today, following the crash of one section of seats at the opening of the mammoth gym Wednesday night. Five hundred persons were dropped into a struggling, scratched and bruised crowd when supports of Section 1 of the temporary bleachers sank into the soft, new clay of the indoor field. The bleachers slid, rather than crashed, to the ground, injuring comparatively few persons. Only two persons were severely enough hurt to be taken to hospitals. Eleven others received bad leg cuts and bruises. Two Sent to Hospitals Miss Beatrice Btirgan, 5105 N. Capitol Ave., was taken to city hospital and then to her home, suffering from bruises and shock. Miss Rosalie Schell, 20, of 56 Downey Ave., is in Indiana Christian Hospital with bad bruises. Indiana High School Athletic Association officials, Butler College authorities, and the city building departments combined today to see that the present bleachers, which are those formerly used at Irwin field in Irvington, either are so reinforced that they will endure any strain the high school rooters will give them, or are replaced with new construction. The board of safety, city building department officials and Butler representatives were personally investigating at' the fieldhouse this afternoon. Responsibility for the crash has not been placed, but City Building Commissioner W. A. Osbon indicated that had orders to place extra bracing, Issued by his subordinates Wednesday morning, been complied with by those in charge of the bleacher erection, the accident might not have happened. Orders Not Fully Met Osbon said his inspectors were told that the uprights upon which the seats rested were sunk two feet into the clay floor, but after the accident he found some holes, indicating they had been sunk only one foot. Heating of the building softened the earth and permitted the uprights to sink, he said. Inspector Mark Weaver, with Tellus D. Lee, assistant building commissioner, and Inspector Wesley Christen gave the field house a final inspection Wednesday morning. Weaver said that Harry P. Bartlett, engineer and architect in charge of the field house construction for Butler University, directed Charles Renshaw, forman in charge, to do whatever the building department ordered, and that the order concerning braces was verbally issued, but not fully compiled with. Thawing Held Cause Hilton U. Brown, chairman of Butler trustees, blamed the thawing of the ground for the accident and said that Butler authorities will do whatever a conference of engineers, architects and city building inspectors, called for today, directs, to make certain that not the slightest accident will mar the high school tournament. K. V. Ammerman, representative here of A. L. Trester, permanent secretary of the high schodl athletic association, said that the contract for use of the field house requires Butler to put It in proper shape for the tournament. He declared that before a single one of the 5,000 seats In the temporary bleachers Is sold he will require written report from the city building department that the seats are safe. Hegeman-Harris Company officials, who are constructing the educational buildings on the new Butler campus, pointed out they had nothing to do with the field house construction. Their bid to construct a field house with steel bleachers was rejected, they said. A. B. C. HEAD TO SPEAK City Business Club Will Hear National President. John G. Petritz of Rockford, 111., president of the National Association of American Business Clubs, will address the local organization at the Columbia Club Friday noon. The organization was chartered under the laws of Alabama In 1923 and the Indianapolis club was established in 1924, with Solon J. Carter as first president. Present officers of the local club are Dr. Cleon Nafe, president; Charles La Follette, vice president; Ralph F. Thompson, secretary, and Bernard Head, treasurer. MUSSOLINI TO~VISIT U. S. Promises to Attend Session of World Anti-Narcotic Session. By United Pres* NEW YORK, March B.—Mussolini has promised to visit the united States this year at the request of the World Anti-Narcotic League which is planning an International conference of women on the drug traffic this spring.