Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 284, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1928 — Page 1

HOOSIER HELD i AFTER GRISLY WIFE KILLING i Murder of Mate, 45, at South Bend. FRIEND CAUSES ARREST Betrays Husband to Police After Promising Aid in Burial. B,u £ niterl Pres* SOUTH BEND, Ind.. March 24.—; Tire mutilated body of Mrs. Roman • Luczkowski, 45, folded up in a: wooden box three and a half feet long, lay in a morgue here today ■while her 21-year-old husband protested his innocence of guilt in her death. Mrs. Luczkowski's body, the skull crushed and the throat slashed, was found in her home Friday night, after Martin Grzesczk, 22, had led police to the scene of the crime and accused the husband of the j murder. Planned Grave in Woods Luczkowski was trapped by Grezsczk and detectives when he j kept an appointment with the | youth to bury the body in a woods ; south of the city. Grzesczk came to detectives Fri- I day and said he visited the Luczo- j wski home Thursday night and saw : the mutilated body. He said that | under threat of death he helped : press the corpse into a wooden box J and promised to meet Luczowski j and help bury the remains. The youth said Luczowski ad- ! mitted the murder. He told police j Luczowski said he killed his wife | with a hammer and then slashed j her throat with a knife. Police said there was no appar- , ent motive for the crime. Arrested Near Church Detectives arrested the husband I as he killed time by walking in front of a church, waiting for Grceszczyk to keep his appointment to aid in the burial of the woman's body. Luczkowski’s auto was parked near. In it officers found a flashlight, shovel and blanket. Immediately after the arrest, officers hastened to the couple's home and discovered the body. According to Grceszczyk, the husband burned a piece of blood stained carpet after the body was placed in the box. A hammer covered with blood matted hair was found by police, but the knife with which the woman’s throat was j slashed is still missing. The couple was married only two months ago. SHOWERS ARE FORECAST Drop of 15 Degrees in Temperatures j Expected Sunday. Showers or thunderstorms this afternoon or tonight, was Weatherman's J. H. Armington prediction today. Temperatures should remain fairly high today, he said but will drop to about fifteen degrees lower Sunday. Sunday will be cloudy, but rain is not likely, he said. The mercury mounted to anew high for the season. 77 degrees, Friday afternoon. HOG PRICES WEAK IN CITY LIVESTOCK MART Steady With Friday, but Drop 10c From High. Hog prices were weak today at the Indianapolis Livestock Exchange. The market was steady with Friday, but a drop of 10 cents was registered from the previous high spots. The top was $8.65 and the bulk $8.50 and down. Receipts were 4.500 and 404 were held over from Friday. Medium animals brought $8.50 to $8.75, and the 250-260-pound class sold for $8.50^8.65. The Chicago market opened steady with Friday’s best. Hog receipts were low, with only 5,000 animals in the pens. Early bulk good to choice, 170-250-pound averages, $8.45 Z 8.60; a few sales on 230-260-pound butchers sold for [email protected]. Cattle and sheep steady with normal receipts.

In the Stock Market

NEW YORK. March 24.—History is in the making as the market broadens and accepts new favorites. Prominent are oil stocks, and indicated success there will bring joy to thousands. Records say big companies now control production and that prices are increasing. While an abrupt shift from depression to top prosperity may not be the immediate prospect, in I'ne oif industry, such overnight shifts have occurred before. KIL LED INS HIP BLAST Three Hurt in Explosion on British Aircraft Carrier. r,'f United Press DEVENPORT, England, March 24. —One man was killed and three were critically injured by an explosion aboard the British aircraft carrier Courageous today in the Devendockyard.

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The Indianapolis Times Unsettled and cooler tonight and Sunday with showers thunderstorms this afternoon or tonight.

VOLUME 39—NUMBER 284

WILD DOGS CAUSE TERROR WAVE IN WARRICK COUNTY

Parents Keep Children in Sight: Caves Hide Savage Band. Bp Times Special BOONVTLLE, Ind., March 24.—A pack of wild dogs is causing terror in Warrick County. Parents are not allowing children to leave their sight, and men frankly admit they feel safer with guns handy. Several years ago the Sunlight Coal Company operated extensive stripper mines northeast of here. The coal gave out, and with the removal of the machinery great caverns were left. These were overgrown with vines and bushes. Farmers recently started reporting chickens were being lost mysteriously. A vigilance committee studied the depredations, and learned strange dog-like animals were denning and producing young in the old coal works. Sly and savage the animals

ASKS REFERENDUM ON WET, DRY ISSUE

How the Market Opened

By l uitrd Press NEW YORK. March 24.—John J. Raskob, chairman of the financial committee of General Motors Corporation. who saited for Europe today, told Dow-Jones &. Cos. the company's common stock should sell at $225 a share on the basis of present earnings. All eyes watched for the opening, which came a few minutes after 10—10,000 shares at 187' %, unchanged from the previous close. Later the issue pushed above 189, a new record high in heavy volume of trading. The entire market was steadier at the opening with strength still appearing in the majority of industrial issues. Rock Island and fit. Louis & San Francisco featured the rails, the former attaining anew high. Next to General Motors SearsRoebuck was the active favorite, rising to anew high at 98%, up 2 points. Montgomery Ward held around the previous close. Hupp turned over in large blocks, rising fractionally to 50 •%. Hudson also gained. Du Pont advanced, with this issue reaching anew high at 380"i, up 5:4. United States Steel held strong at 147%, up r %. New York Stock Opening Am Con 83% Am Car Fdry 108 Am Smoltlnsr 185 1 i Am Steel Fdrv 65' 2 Am Tel & Tel 181 % Am Linseed 05 Am Wool 23% Anaconda 57 Chrysler 83% Cons Gas 140% Cont. Can 90% Cont Motors 11% Dodge 20% Fisk Tire 15% Freeport 81L Gen Electric 178' Gen Motcrs 187% Goodyear 55% Hudson Motor 93 Hupo Motors 50% Mack 93% Marland 38% Mont Ward 138% N Y Central 172% Nash 89 Packard 65 Paige 26% Pullman 85% Pure Oil 22 Radio 151 Rem Rana 27 a Reading 106 Rock Island 113 % St. Paul Pfd 72% Sears-Roebuck 97% Sinclair 26% S O N J 70% Stew Warner 89% Studebaker 63 Tex oil ,£2% Un Carbide & Carbon 150 v U S Rubber 75% U S Steel 17% Willvs Over 22% Yellow Truck 33% New York Curb Opening Bid. Ask. Amer Gas 13? 139 Vie Amer R Mill 100% 106 Cont Oil 17 17% Durant 10% 10% Ford (Canada) 570 585 Humble Oil 63% 63% Imp Oil 58% 59% Ind Pipe 82 83% Int Pete 37% 37% Ohio Oil 59% 62% Prairie Oil and Gas 43% 49 Prairie Pipe 72®. 1??% Stutz I*% 1j Standard Oil. Indiana 74% 74% Standard Oil, Kansas 18V* 18% Standard Oil. Kv 126 126% Vacuum Oil I*2 *143 Marmon 43% 44 Darby’s Eye Is Saved By Times Special MIAMI BEACH. Fla., March 24. Norman E. Darby, Indianapol athlete, has entirely recovered from injuries received in an auto accident while en route from Jacksonville to Miami Beach recently. It was at first believed he would lose the sight of one eye. The eye has healed.

PRETTY ELUSIVE GIRL BANDIT NEARS DEATH AFTER VIVID IN-OUT JAIL CAREER

BY PERCY B. SCOTT United Tress Staff Correspondent Albany, n. y., March 24.— a pretty young woman, who has sneered and beguiled her way out of many cells, today was held captive —with death threatening. It is Jean Cameron, known as one of the country’s most elusive petty criminals. She was arrested and held in the county jail. Sunday night she took poison tablets. It was her third at-

showed themselves—efforts to trap them proved futile. Noble White, prominent farmer of Degonia, devised a scheme to place a calf carcass near the caverns. When the dogs were enticed from their dens by the odor of fresh meat the farmers were to make use of their shotguns. The animals sallied forth—all sizes and in varying degrees of ferocity. Sylvester White, a young farm boy, proved the best marksmen killing two. Others escaped, some wounded, in the workings. With the exception that the eyes were very small, not much larger than a pea, the animals resembled ordinary domestic canines. They eyes are believed to have changed due to dark surroundings. The farmers counted twenty-nine. “I work with a shotgun by me." commented Allie Veeck, farmer, who described a wild dog seen on his land being as large and bulky as some smaller species of bear. From where the dogs came is unknown. When they will be routed is unknown, for the farmers are not any too eager to meet them even on a hunting expedition.

Dyer Urges National Vote on Liquor Control Plan Like Canada's. /’.// r 'titled Press WASHINGTON. March 24.—The wet and dry issue is expected to be awakened soon from its long slumber in committee pigeonholes by a series of hearings before the House Judiciary Committee, birthplace of the Volstead act. Acting Chairman Dyer, a wet, will ask his committee within the next few days to hold hearings on his proposed constitutional amendment to permit a national referendum on prohibition. He will also ask consideration of other pending measures, including those for legalizing light wines and beer. The way was opened by the brief hearing Friday on a proposed constitutional amendment., introduced by Representative Sabath <Dem.), Illinois, to establish the Canadian system of government liquor con.trol. This was the first House hearing on prohibition in five years and was held before a judiciary subcommittee. Dyer's plan is to begin the general hearings in about ten days or tvweeks. He plans to call outstanding figures in the country, rather than confine the hearings to representatives of wet and dry organizations. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, probably will be among those summoned, if the committee approves the plan. The hearings may broaden into such an investigation as that conducted two years ago by a special Senate committee, headed by Senator Reed (Dem.), Missouri. Like tliat investigation, these hearings will result in no immediate legislative activity, as the House, like the Senate, is controlled by the drys.

ENFORCE GAS TAX Collectors on State Line to Warn Evaders. Gasoline tax collectors will be placed at the Indiana-Illinois line to watch and arrest all gasoline bootleggers and to serve warning on Hoosiers who cross the line merely to purchase gasoline, that this offense is punishable by a fine, L. S. Bowman, State auditor, announced today. The Illinois price on gas is 3 cents less than in Hammond, and many from that city are crossing the line for gas, decreasing the State’s revenue by thousands of dollars. “If the buyer of gas in Illinois, after a sufficient number of warnings fails to obey the statute he will be arrested and prosecuted by this department.” Bowman said. Hoosier’s Kin Dies in Fire By Times Special HARTFORD CITY. Ind.. March 24.—0. K. Moore, Blackford County farmer, is en route to Trinidad, Colo., to attend the funeral of his brother, George Moore, who perished in flames that destroyed his home. The victim was an uncle of Harry Moore, Blackford County, and a brother of Mrs. John Graham, Chesterfield.

tempt at suicide. Doctors shook their heads gravely this time because her third attempt seemed dangerous. Jean Cameron is notorious, but in a more or less Interesting way. As Hazel Burmcsster, the name authorities claim is real, she was charged with robbing her grandfather, John R. Mulvey, wealthy Chicago banker, several years ago. nan SINCE then hers has been somewhat of an “in again,

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1928

FEAR EFFECTS OF ROBINSON’S RAP AT SMITH Democrats Study Indiana Political Scandals to Prepare Reply. COLLEAGUES RESENTFUL Feel Own Chances May Be Hurt in Airing of State Corruption. B.'i I nitrd Press WASHINGTON. March 24 —Senator Arthur Robinson's "birds of a feather" phrase turned against him so neatly by Senate Democrats following Robinson's attempt to link leading Democrats with the oil scandals promises to ring through the Capitol corridors for an indefinite period. Senate Democrats have been digging into the history of Indiana's scandals of the past two years, until now some of them are thoroughly conversant with political happenings in the State. They intend to enlarge upon Robinson's past connections in Indiana, whenever he take the floor upon the subject, and from present indications they will have plenty of opportunity to do so. Indianians Resent Tactics Robinson was all set to speak Friday when the Senate adjourned because of the death of Senator Feriis of Michigan. He was hurrying to the Senate chamber with an armload of documents when told of Ferris’ death. He expressed disappointment, saying he had intended to speak on the subject of oil scandals not only Friday but Saturday. Meanwhile there is growing resentment among the Republican members of the Indiana delegation against Robinson's tactics. They feel the opportunity he is affording for hostile comment upon past connections of D. C. Stephenson with the Indiana Republican organization, to be reprinted in Indiana and dwelt upon by their opponents, imperils not only Robinson's success at the primary and general election, but their own. "Robinson is the last man in the Senate to lay himself open to an attack on the subject of his own former connections,” said one Indiana representative. “Some of us were worried enough as it was." Watson Is Worried Senator Nye of North Dakota, chairman of the Public Lands Committee, himself disavowed any connection with Robinson in his letter of reply Friday to Governor Smith, who had challenged the accuracy of the Nye-Robinson statements in the Senate. ‘‘Senator Robinson belongs to a faction of the Republican party with which I have never been charged, until now and by you, with identifying myself,” wrote Nye. He said he obtained his information regarding the New York situation from a source independent of Robinson. Senator Watson. Republican party boss of Indiana, is also known to be worried about the effect of Robinson speeches, his unhappy countenance in the Senate during Senator Harrison’s "birds of a feather” reply to Robinson Wednesday bearing full evidence of that fact. PRISON GIVES UP TWO New Albany Men Confined Illegally for Five Years. By Times Special LA PORTE, Ind.. March 24. Archie Wells and Alba Banks, both cf New Albany, are free after being illegally confined for five years at the Indiana State Prison, Michigan City. They were coivicted of robbery. Freedom was obtained for the two when their counsel proved to Judge John C. Richter in Circuit Court here that committments in the cases were changed after the men started serving their terms. HELD '.FOR CAR THEFT Because police charge that in 1925 he rented a “drive it yourself” automobile here, which was later found abandoned in Jacksonville, Fla., Byron Hurley, 25, who gave his address as “City” is in city prison today. He will be arraigned for vehicle taking and for issuing a fraudulent check, according to the officers. Hurley was arrested Friday night at Anderson. Ind., and returned here.

out again” career. She was disowned by her grandfather and was taken in by Mrs. Robert Welles. She was charged with robbing her benefactress, and sentenced to the Illinois Penitentiary at Joliet. She escaped, the only woman ever to escape from that high walled prison. Later she was captured at Hudson, N. Y„ and subsequently held on a bad check charge. She seized a guard’s pistol and attempted to end her own

Gang Gets ‘Diamond Joe ’

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(NEA Chicago Bureau.) “Diamond Joe" Esposito was czar of the old "Bloody Nineteenth” ward in Chicago. Returning from a political meeting, with his bodyguard, his $5,000 diamond ring and a belt studded with diamonds, he faced five men, who opened fire. The body guard dropped to the sidewalk. Esposito dropped, too, dead. "Diamond Joe” is shown at the top when he was host at a banquet given for poor children of his ward. Below are Mrs. Esposito and the home in front of which the shooting took place.

BERLIN PARLEY PLEA BEATEN League Rejects Appeal to Call Arms Conclave. r.y I Cited Burs GENEVA. March 24.—The preparatory disarmament conference of the League of Nations today rejected the suggestion of Count Johann von Bcrnstorff, chief German delegate, that a full disarmament conference be called before the end of 1928. The commission, in repccting the van Bcrnstorlf motion, insisted that, preparatory work had not advanced sufficiently for such a conference at the time designated by the German delegate. Previously the proposal had been opposed bitterly. Lord Cushendun of the British delegation attacked the von Bernstorff motion yesterday, along with the motion of Maxim Litvinoff, chief of the Russian delegation, for complete disarmament. A repetition of yesterday's attack started again this morning. TWO CITY YEGGMEN ARE BELIEVED HELD Worley Suspects Pair of Part in Fifty City Robberies. Two of the three yeggmen who, police believe, have battered open and robbed nearly fifty safes in filling stations and business places here since Jan. 1 are under arrest at Richmond, Police Chief Claude M. Worley thinks. Detectives will be sent to question the men. Richmond police telephoned they arrested one of the men inside a filling station beside a battered open safe. He gave his name as Elmer Boswell, 1607 De Loss St. A man outside the station who escaped when police approached was his brother, Francis, Elmer said. Police later arrested a man believed to be the fugitive, who gave his name as Edward Boswell, 923 W. Morris St. Safe robbers also have been active at Kokomo and Noblesville this week, Worley said. Brazilian Diplomat Dies WASHINGTON. March 24.—Dr. M. Oliviera Lima, distinguished Brazilian diplomat and writer, died at his residence here this morning after a three months’ illness.

life. For months she was in the hospital. Then she returned to Joliet, and because of* illness was dismissed and sent to her home in Milwaukee. She recovered. Next she was arrested in New Jersey and held in jail for some rather petty crime. Harry (Bowler) Haines came as benefactor. He made bond for her, aided her in attempting to go straight and then, according to

LINDBERGH ENDS FREE JOY RIDES Completes Schedule Today: Guests Total 700. /V( t nited Press WASHINGTON. March 24. Charles Lindbergh set out today to complete what is probably the most intensive air chauffering task ever performed. It was the last day of Lindbergh's “free rides to Congressmen and then families" in the interest of aviation. More than 700 will have been carried by nightfall. He gave joy-rides to 201 persons in twenty-three trip? Friday, and his passenger list since Tuesday, when lie started his selfimposed task, totals 511. About one-lialf of the 535 members of Congress have been taken up. but the 2.000 or more relatives of Congressmen continued to besiege Assistant Secretary of Commerce MacCracken for authority to ride. Lindbergh will make no more of these flights after today, however. He intends to rest for a few days, and then probably will take Henry Breckenridge, his attorney, to New York in his Ryan brougham monoplane. Two women stowaways were taken out of one of Lindbergh's transport planes. Friday, as it was being finj ally checked for departure. They were Miss Marguerite Mesny, a George Washington University student here .who has admired the ! flier ever since she witnessed New | York’s boisterous welcome to him, and Mrs. Freida Emma Lundberg, a native of Sweden, the country from which Lindbergh’s father came. Truck Driver Killed By Time* Special ALEXANDRIA. Ind.. March 23. Clarence Clock, 33. this city, was killed while returning here from Anderson when the truck he was | driving crashed into a telephone pole. The truck left the road as J Clock attempted to give room for j an approaching automobile to pass. Wage Scales Unchanged | By Times Special j ANDERSON. Ind., March 24. All building trades workers here i will continue to be paid the 1927 ! -scale of wages through the present year, as a result of agreements with contractors. The hourly wages arc: Carpenters and electricians, $1; plumbers and pipefitters, $1.10: paints. sl, and brick masons, $1.50.

police reports, was robbed by the girl. tt n a THE pretty girl was charged with having sent a taxi-cab driver on an errand and stealing the cab in escaping. She was arrested with Frank Urban of Albany, in connection with a robbery charge brought by Mrs. Julia Howe, of New York Cily. She gained her release through bond, went to Albany and was charged with stealing a

Eutcreil as Second-Glass Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis

IMPEACHMENT OF MOORE BY GRAND JURY MAY BE NEXT PROSECUTION MOVE

S2OAO Blessing By Times Special VINCENNES. Ind.. March 24. —R. G. Hess, filling station attendant, discovered he was short $20.40 after a band of gypsies had patronized the station. As one of the band handed Hess $5 in payment for some gasoline, the others gathered about him in a “bless money” ceremony. After the gypsies rode away in two automobiles. Hess learned the blessing's costs.

LASKER CALLED IN OIL INQUIRY Ex-Ship Board Head May Know of G. 0. P. Deals. I r,y I niter! Press WASHINGTON. March 24.—A. D. Lasker, former chairman of the United States shipping board, credited with collecting important campaign funds for the Republican party, was called for questioning before the Senate Teapot Dome committee today. Reports have reached the com- ; mittec that Lasker may know important facts about the efforts to J raise the $700,000 deficit the party incurred in electing the late President Harding in 1920. i Committee members said Lasker I would be asked if he received $150,000 in Liberty Bonds from Thomas W. Miller, former alien | property custodian, now under sentence in New York for alleged conspiracy in office. Miller was convicted in a trial with former Attorney General Daughtery, in which he was charged with having received money in connection with disposij tion of German property siezed j during the war. Daugherty was not j convicted and Miller has appealed. Lasker also will be asked if he had any dealings with Miller in 1 helping to raise funds to pay off | the deficit. Lasker was listed as a contributor to the deficit fund and is supposed to have raised money for the Republican party at various times. NABS TWO IN CHASE Clerk Captures Mexicans After Store Theft. The hand is not. quicker than the eye, Charles Endcrs, clerk at the Traugott store. 215 W. Washington St., demonstrate to two Mexicans today. The pair were arrested on a larceny charge. They gave their names as Rodrieo Apodoca, Deming, N. M., and Alfredo Lopez, Dallas, Texas. Endcrs was showing Lopez trousers while Apodoca slipped four pairs of trousers under his coat, Enders said. Lopez decided he did not wish to buy and left. Endcrs followed and the chase gradually attracted an informal posse. At 154 S. Illinois Et., Enders overtook the Mexicans and held the two until police arrived. He got back the pants. LOOTS GAS STATION Open Window Costs Attendant Loss of S7O. Harry W. Kountz. attendant at | the Pure Oil filling station at Cap- | itol and Indiana Aves., was held up j at 3:35 a. m. today. Kountz was lying on a table. The door w as locked, but the window was open. The bandit stuck a gun through the open window. Kountz handed over S7O. A hold-up man robbed William ! Lewis, driver of a People’s Motor ; Coach Company bus of $2 at Bur- ! gess and Grand Aves. Woman Robs Man on Street Burinlne Meador, 22. of 1220 W. Thirtieth St., complained to police Friday night that he had been robbed of $lO by a woman who stopped him on the street at Senate Ave. and North St. to inquire a direction.

fur coat from the woman at whose home she had once lived. Finally she was re-arrested here, after getting bail in a number of New Jersey cities, and held in jail pending action on a first degree larceny charge. Previously she had been accused of almost everything in the petty crime category. It was while awaiting trial that she took the poison ar.d which, doctors say, may result in her death.

NOON

Outside Marion County 3 Cents

TWO CENTS

Sentence of Councilman Slated for Saturday by Judge Davis. APPEAL TO BE TAKEN Convicted Man Free on Bond: Dorsett Next on Trial. Impeachemnt of City Councilman Boynton J. Moore, found guilty Friday afternoon by a Criminal Court jury of soliciting and accepting a bribe, by the Marion County grand jury was being considered today. Prosecutors said nothing will be done until Special Judge Paul G. Davis formally sentences Moore next Saturday. The conviction carried two to fourteen years in the State prison and a maximum fine of SI,OOO and rules that the defendant will bo “disfranchised and rendered incapable of holding any office ol trust or profit for any determinate period.” Attorneys for Moore arc planning to resist ouster moves on the ground that the appeal which will be taken to the Supreme Court stays execution of the entire judgment. Base Hope on Appeal The questions that probably, will be raised in the Moore case arc expected to parallel those subsequent to the conviction of former Mayor ■John L. Duvall, when lie contended he was in office, regardless of the conviction, because his case was appealed to the Supreme Court. The city council has the power to impeach, but council members indicated no action will be taken. Five other councilmen are under indictment on similar charges. Moore is at liberty today on the bond which was in effect prior to the trial. An appeal bond will be set next Saturday, when sentence is passed and other details regarding the appeal will be attended to. Dorsett Next on Trial Walter R. Dorsett will be the first, of the other councilman facing indictment, to go to trial. His trial is set for April 9 in Criminal Court, the other four to follow. The others facing trial are Otis E. Bartholomew, Millard W. Ferguson. Austin H. Todd and Claude E. Negley. Moore also faces four other indictments and one is pending against Moore’s real estate partner. Martin Frankfort. The sentence is mandatory upon conviction, while the amount of the fine may be set by the court when formal sentence is passed. The jury’s verdict, was read shortly before 5 o’clock Friday to a crowded courtroom, twenty minutes after the jury started its deliberations. Moore heard the verdict without flinching, maintaing the immobile expression that has marked his appearance in court throughout the trial, which started March 10. Sister Is at Side At his side was his sister, Mrs. Ray Seibert, whose husband figured prominently in the trial testimony as the messenger who brought SSOO of the bribe money to a group of councilmen. A woman came to the courtroom as the verdict was read. She ran up to Moore and sobbed, "Boynton, oh Boynton.” Mrs. Moore and their two children were not in the courtroom. They had been with Moore throughout the trial until the verdict was read. It was said they had started home and could not *be summoned in time for the formal reading of the verdict. Os the three corruption probe trials Prosecutor William H. Remy has handled, two have been verdicts of guilty, returned in a few minutes. The other conviction was that of Mayor John L. Duvall, whose testimony aided the State in its charges against Moore this time. The third trial was that of Governor Jackson, who was freed on a technicality, by using the statute of limitations as a defense. The State's case against Moore was built around the charge that he accepted SIOO from John J. Collins, then city purchasing agent, last August, to influence his vote on impeachment proceedings against Mayor Duvall. Remy was aided by Special Assistant Emslcy W. Johnson. Moore's attorneys, Ira M. Holmes and Henry H. Winkler, tried to prove an alibi that Moore was out of the city on the date in question. DIAMOND. sls STOLEN Burglars Freak Into Two Homes During Night. A burglar “jimmied” his way into two residences Friday night. Paul E. Beam, 1062 W. ThirtySecond St., was away from home forty minutes during which time a burglar took sl2 in cash. John Dixon, 33 N. Kitle.v Rd., listed a diamond ring valued at $125 taken from his home. Hourly Temperatures 6 a, m.... 57 8 a. m.... 57 7 a. m.... 56 9 a. m.... 61 10 a. m.... 63