Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 293, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1928 — Page 7

WPttlL 4, 1928.

BLUE BLOOD OF BRITAIN FLOWS IN RACESPILLS Prince of Wales and Other Notables Are Hurt in Mishaps; Two Die. , BY HARRY L. PERCY United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, April 4.—Much blue , blood and red blood lias been , spilled during the present hifnting 1 and steeplechase season. * Princes, potentates, lords, ladies , and commoners have come crop- ! pers in a record number of casualties. Horses representing tens of thoui sands of dollars in value have been destroyed. So far as is known there have only been two deaths in the huntl ing field this season. The more Iragic of these was that of Lady i Victoria Bullock, only daughter of Lord Derby. i The other was that of James Lew'is. an octogenarian rider to hounds well known in hunting circles. Prince in Accident Figuring prominently among those who have had accidents during the last few months are the Prince of Wales, Prince Henry, the Maharajah and Maharanee of Cooch-Behar, the Duke of Beaufort, Earl Beatty, Lord Barnard, Lord Wodehouse, Lady Currie, Lady 1 Mary Scott and a host of “lessor ! lights.” Lady Victoria Bullock fractured her skull while out with the Quorn i Hunt. It was thought that her head came in contact with an arch- : way. , The Prince of Wales and Prince Henry were in the field at the time. James Lewis was missed during ► a run with Sir Edward Currie’s hounds at Chepstow. His riderless * horse was found, and later hjs body. It was thought that he had been 1 thrown. I Animals Suffer Most The list of steeplechasing accii dents is no less long, although in a sport where a fall is all more or less in the day’s work, the casual--1 ties were confined chiefly to the ! animals. Within the last two months 1 alone there have been fourteen fatalities among race horses. Most of* them have been in the plating L class except White Park, which was j entered for the Grand National and was worth about $25,000. * It is noteworthy that these acci- , dents occurred on racetracks in the ’ south and midlands, and in this connection, it is a fact that there have not been many horses actually | killed on the Aintree track where r the Grand National was run last week. Wales’ Horse Destroyed The mishap to the Prince of Wales; occurred w hen his horse March Maid stumbled on a stake ■ during a run with the Quorn. The ■ Prince was only shaken, but March ■ Maid had to be destroyed. ■ Prince Henry took a toss when ■his horse fell and shot him out of Bthe saddle while hunting with the ■Quorn. The P inee was not hurt ■and soon remounted on another Rnorse. ■ The accident to the Maharanee of,

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Cooch-Behar was of a more serious nature. Her horse fell in collision with another and bringing the Maharanee down with him rolled on her. She sustained concussion, a bruised spine and severe crushing. Three days later her son fell from his horse, but was not liurt. Bad weather and consequently bad going are given by many as a reason for these accidents. INDIANA INDIAN FOE OF PROHIBITION PERIOD Survivor of the Delawares Lives in Log Cabin Near Wabash. Rji Times Special WABASH. Ind., April 4.—Heedless of modern conveniences but well aware of prohibition, John Newman, 83, Delaware Indian, lives with his sort, Walter, in a fifty-year-old log cabin on a seven-acre tract of land eight miles southeast of here. Once the cabin had two windows, but one has been boarded up. In these words Newman sums up his opinion of today in America: “Folks are too aristocratic nowadays; every fellow is trying to outdo the other. Times have changed; once we could have a good time drinking and telling stories, but now we have prohibition.’’

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RACE AROUND WORLD Japanese Travel in Opposite Directions. By I nih <l I’ress TOKIO. April 4,—Two Japanese— Araki and Matsui —today started on a race around the world, Araki traveling eastward, while his rival will use the westward route. They will use any mode of travel available. Diplomats and members of the cabinet gave them a rousing send off, while Prince Asakanomiya presented each with a flag.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CHURCH WAR !N MEXICO IS FAR FROM SOLUTION Deadlock Remains, With no Progress Being Made Toward Peace. BY GESFOIID F. FINK United Press Staff Correspondent MEXICO CITY, Mexico, April 4. | —Whether a genuine effort is being ! made to solve the Catholic church | question in Mexico is highly debat- ; able. Accordingly it is impossible to | estimate how much longer the presi ent deadlock between the church I and the government of Mexico will | continue. | There seems no doubt now that i negotiations between the intermeI diaries of the church and govern- | inent are under way and have been' ' under way almost continually since I the trouble began in August, 1926. I How fruitful these negotiations are going to be in the near future, nobody knows. Questions to persons in high offices as to what steps are being taken toward a settlement are met always with evasive answers. One is told that attempts are constantly being made to effect a solution but no one can say definitely in what form or how far along the conferences have traveled the road to peace. With arrests continuing for violation of the laws by priests who celebrate mass clandestinely and i persons who attend in the same

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manner, it does not seem, on the : surface, that there is any immediate prospect of peace ahead. Priests have been deported recently for holding services unlawfully and one. Father Donanciano Villanueva of San Luis Potosi, was executed, March 14, charged with participating in the revolutionary movement in that state. Basically, the quarrel of the church and Mexican government was and still is over the question of the registration of the priests. The church contended that the form in which they were asked to register amounted to putting them under State control. If a compromise could be reached on this point, the problem might be solved with speed. The spectacle of the churches sometimes nearly filled with worshippers who have no priest to direct their devotions still presents itself in Mexico daily. For the ifiost part there are only a few who attend prayers in the

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500 Chicks Die in Fire ANDERSON, Ind., April 4.—Five hundred two-weeks oild chicks died in a fire which destroyed a brooder at the farm of Fred Bryant, three miles northwest of here.

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