Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 295, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1928 — Page 9

APRIL 6, 1928.

HEAD OF LEGION URGES ADOPTION OF DRAFT BILL Spafford Asks Public tor Support of Measure as Peace Move. National Commander Edward E. Spafford of the American Legion today issued a call to all American citizens to support the universal draft measure, now before Congress, as an insurance of permanent peace. The message was made public at Legion national headquarters here in commemoration of the anniversary of America’s entry into the World War on April 6, 1917. Commander Spafford is on an airplane tour of fourteen States in the Northwest and was scheduled to be at Ogden, Utah, today. Protect Next Generation The universal draft measure “will protect our children of tomorrow against slackers and profiteers if war comes,” he declared in his message. He also pointed out that twenty thousand new millionaires were created during the World War. His message: “This day we should look backward eleven years when our country faced the greatest crisis in our history and every State was mobilizing its youth to meet it. “Our young men were drawn into the bloodiest conflict that the world has yet experienced. They served with sacrifice and suffering in the trenches and on battle fields. They did their full duty. Urges Safeguard Against War “We now have another duty, just as urgent and too long delayed, to perform. “We must keep faith with those young men who carried the heaviest burdens and died that we might enjoy the blessings of this country in peace. We can keep that faith by helping safeguard the future with a permanent insurance against war. “We can help make it impossible for some people to shout for war, then, refusing to go, throw their efforts into business and make huge profits. “There is no better way of keeping faith than by enacting the universal draft law. It should be done at the present session of Congress. “This law will insure equal service for all, profits for none, without expense to maintain and will do more toward making other nations avoid confronting us with the necessity of going into war than anything else that can be devised.”

HOTEL ROOF WILL HAVE 18-HOLE GOLF COURSE Forty Minutes Required to Play With Par 36. Bn United Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala. April 6. The first 18-hole golf course to be built on top of p, hotel in this country will be erected on the roof of the Tutwiler Hotel here. The course will occupy 3,500 square feet of space and will have all the hazards of outdoor courses. There will be sand traps, water holes and curbed putts. From 35 to 40 minutes will be required to play the par 36 course. Fairways, closely resembling grass in looks and effect, will be built forty feet in length and six feet in width. Asa protection to pedestrians on the streets a large net will be placed around the building. A special made driving net will be one of the features of the course. It is being built by the Tutewiler Hdtel and will be formally opened with a tournament in April. Hoosier Returns From Far East By 'Mutes Special RENSSELAER. Ind„ April 6. Glen Wishard, a native here, who for the past fourteen years has been a Y. M. C. A. worker in India and the Island of Ceylon, is a guest here of his cousins, Dr. A. R. Kresler and Frank G. Kresler.

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LONG-TIME RESIDENT OF CITY DIES IN WEST C. A. Kinder, Printer, Succumbs in Los Angeles.

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C. A. Kinder

Word has been received here by Mrs. R. G. Reynolds, 3524 Rockville Rd., of the death at Los Angeles of her brother. C. A. Kinder, 51, a former resident of Indianapolis. Death was caused by heart trouble, from which he had suffered for years. During his long residence here he was in newspaper work, being on staff of The Indianapolis News and the Star, leaving here to take up work at Nazarene Publishing House in Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Kinder was a veteran of the SpanishAmerican war and also served overseas in the World War as a Y. M. C. A. secretary. For the last four years he had been teaching in the Los Angeles Ttfcde School of Printing. Besides the widow and daughter, Mrs. R. D. Collins of Tulsa, Okla., he is survived by the father, J. B. Kinder, Los Angeles; the brother, F. R. Kinder, Kansas City, Mn., and Mrs. Reynolds. The body will be returned to Indianapolis for burial. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. §120,000 School Project By Times Special NEWCASTLE. Ind., April 6. The Dudley Township advisory board has decided on a $120,000 school building program, including an SBO,OOO structure at Straughn, replacing one destroyed by fire a few weeks ago, and $40,000 in improvements to the building at New Lisbon. A proposal for a consolidated township school to have been located at New Lisbon has been abandoned.

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EFFICIENCY IN BUS OPERATION follows mm Industry Stabilized After Inflation; Tendency to Consolidation. Stabiliaztion has reached the bus industry and today the inflation which naturally followed the first use of these vehicles as transportation units has subsided and the busses are being used and routed in the most economical manner. This was the statement of Howell Ellis, Public Service Commissioner today when he announced that a member of the Indiana Commission would attend the hearing before the Interstate Commerce Committee of the Senate in Washington April ID. At this meeting the question of obtaining the passage of a bill would give the State Commissions the authority to handle all bus line mat-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WILL HAYS IS ACCUSED McArthur, North Dakota, Sticks to Guns in Oil Case. WASHINGTON, April 6.—D. H. McArthur, North Dakota Democrat,

is firm in his maintenance o f charges recently aired here that former Republican Chairman Will Hays tried to squelch the Teapot Dome investigation. McArthur now is secretary to Senator G. P. Nye, Republican. North Dakota, head of the investigating committee.

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D. H. McArthur

ters with the Interstate Commerce Commission, as the court of appeals will be discussed. “The records of the commission show that the bus lines are achieving normalcy. At first many bus lines were started in districts where they were not needed and which could not provide their upkeep. But today we are not receiving many applications for certificates of convenience and there is apparent in that division of transportation a de-

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sire for consolidation and unification which will tend to give better service and will cut down the overhead,” Ellis said. Statistics of the commission reveal that in 1926 the 200 bus routes in the State, not including interstate companies, earned a total revenue of $5,176,652 and expended $6,067,299 leaving a deficit of $890,647. This indicated that it was impossible for bus lines to be in active competition with each other and manage to keep their heads above water. In the last year, for which the figures have not been compiled as yet, many lines sold out to competitors, or went out of business and the atmosphere has been clarified. It is expected that a slight profit will be indicated by the new figures. The best period of the year for bus lines is the spring when many persons prefer riding in the practically sootless, open-windowed busses to the stuffy, smoke-begrimed trains, ticket agents at both principal bus stations here declared. Bullet-Proof Vests for Police. By Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., April 6.—Three bullet-proof vests have been ordered for use by members of the Crawfordsville police department.

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