Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
BRANDS CALLES ANTI-CHRISTIAN Bishop Denies Church in Mexican Politics. By United Press NEW YORK, April 14.—Denying that the Catholic church has mixed in politics in Mexico and that priests are promoting revolution in that country, Bishop Pascual Diaz of Tabasco, Mexico, in an interview Friday replied to statements made by President Calles in a recent interview with J. W. T. Mason of the London Daily Express. Bishop Diaz, until his arrest and expulsion by the Mexican government last year, was the secretary of the Mexican Catholic Episcopate and was regarded as the spokesman of the Episcopate in Mexico City After leaving Mexico, he came to New York via. Central America and Panama, and has resided here since then. “President Calles’ policy, which is behind the mask of social advancement of the Mexican people,” said the bishop, “is the actual elimination of the Christian religion in Mexico. His policy is not alone anti-Catholic, but anti-Christian. His attempts by false propaganda to influence the American people against the Catholic church there is part of his general scheme to destroy the church.” DELAY MURDER TRIAL Veniremen Fail to Appear in Case of Miami Policemen. By United Press MIAMI, Fia., April' 14.—Failure of veniremen to appear caused postponement of the trial of Police Chief Leslie Quigg and three suspended members of the police department until April 18. The men are charged with murdering a Negro bellboy.
Daily Comment
Bandit Killed An Indianapolis confectioner killed a bandit -who was holding him up last night. This kind of treatment may discourage the hold-up men somewhat. It is too bad that all crooks can't see the error of their ways and turn their efforts to honest means of making a living. Protect your valuables from bandits and keep them in the City Trust Company’s burglar and fireproof vault. You can rent a box for less than a penny a day. CITY TRUST CO. Dick .Miller, President (gggg;ioß E. Washington St * MOTION PICTURES
■. - • P PALACE U t “ i " '
Continuous 11 A.M.-ll :30 P.M. PRICES 25c to 1 P. M., 85c to 0 P. M., 50c evening.
f VAST TIMES \ TODAY \ “Sorrell and Son” with H. B. Warner Anna Q. Nilsson, Alice Joyce United Artists Picture AND ON THE STAGE “BABY GRANDS” WITH TEDDY JOYCE Brady & Wells, Olivette Buck & Bubbles, Hale Girls A Mort Harris J L production /
TOMORROW
NORMA TALMADGE IN “The Dove” with Noah Beery and . Roland Gilbert ON STAGE "Northern Knights”
WITH TEDDY JOYCE EMILE BOREO 10 Singing Eagles, Sylvia Miller, Chester Hale Girls, Dusty Roades. Cast of 64. Produced by MORT HARRIS
Breaks Record
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Gene Shank By United Press ST. PAUL, Minn., April 14. Gene Shank, law student-aviator, Friday broke the world’s record for light plane endurance flights when he remained in the air fourteen hours before being forced down by a gale and blinding snow. The record was held by the late Harry Brooks, pilot for Henry Ford, who made a non-stop flight from Detroit to Titusville, Fla., in 12 hours and 30 minutes. The record was for planes of 100 horse power or less.
FALLS UNDER FREIGHT Injured Brakeman Narrowly Escapes Being Run Over by Train. Earl Berdman, 33, of 416 Hamilton Ave., a Nickel Plate brakeman, missed decapitation under a freight train by inches Friday. Riding on the side of a freight train on the Nickel Plate tracks near TwentySecond St., he was knocked from the train when he leaned out to give a signal and his head hit a semaphore. When the train stopped he was found unconscious his head only a few inches from the track over which the train was passing. He was taken to Methodist Hospital. State highway commission is defendant in a breach of contract suit for $60,000 damages filed Thursday in Superior Court Two by the J. M. Snyder & Cos., highway contractors. The loss is alleged on a strip of road in Boone and Clinton Counties. The suit will be decided by all five superior judges sitting in general term. County commissioners today awarded a contract for twenty mattresses, totaling $250, to the White Furniture Company, the low bidder. The only other bidder was the Indiana State Reformatory. The furniture company bid $5.25 and $7.25 on two grades of mattresses and the reformatory bid $5.40 and $7.75.
I \ OPENING / \ Sale! / STATE RADIO CO. \ Formerly // AVe’ve changed our EE.H4.A. // Loudspeakers name and -moved into // Trickle Chargors new and larger quarters \ Sales // Eliminators . . . and to quickly ac- _ // Batteries, Tubes, quaint the public with LOa // and Radio Accessories (he change, we are of- // of All Kinds sering some unheard of V. // at Bargain Prices Radio bargains. // , Reduced prices . . . lowered terms . . . these are the high points of this big opening sale of used and repossessed radios. BARGAINS GALORE All sets priced without accessories \ unless otherwise specified. _ / . . „ \ ■ /**■' Ban \ \ -— ■—r <w \3^\ \ \ \ Rad io --- / $ Wg*. / \ V - L. - RCA 6-Tube Sup er- Jr / X -- Erla RFL (bar Hetrodyne, semi- (trr / ~ 6-Tube *4D portable tj)l) 0 < *• De Forest 5-Tube Loop Radio with Built-in Speaker, Complete, $65 STATE RADIO CO. Formerly Erla Sales Cos. 316 North Illinois Street
CITY NURSES ORGANIZE Industrial Workers Would Join National Association. Industrial nurses from Indianapolis factories perfected an organization to affiliate with the industrial section of the National Association of Public Health Nurses. They will carry on a study of industrial health problems here. Miss Ella Stuart was named chairman of the group and Miss Betty Faust secretary. Next meeting will be a dinner at the Elks Club, it was announced. The majority of the industrial nurses arj employed at the factories by insurance companies carrying workingmen's compensation. HAPGOODS ARE FREED By United Press WILKESBARRE. Pa.. April 14. Powers Hapgood, Indianapolis, and his wife Mary Donovan Hapgood celebrated Friday tlae thirteenth as good luck day. They were released on charges of inciting to riot by Judge B. R. Jones in the Luzerne County Court.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Actress Sued
Pis ■■■x-'
Eleanor Boardman NEW YORK, April 14.—The jury was completed Friday in the case of Murray Phillips, booking agent.
against Eleanor Boardman, moving picture actress, for violation of an alleged contract giving Phillips a percentage of the actress’ earnings. Phillips contends the moving picture actress contracted Oct. 1, 1921, to give him 5 per cent of her weekly earnings on the stage and 10 per cent of her moving picture earnings. Phillips said he wanted a settlement of $4,720 for the five-year period. DESCRIBE CITY SURVEY How many babies, automobiles, telephones, and how the rents vary in each neighborhood of St. Louis, Mo., was checked up in a series of interesting statistical experiments, described at the Lincoln Friday to the Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies, by Elwood Street, director of the Community Fund and Council of St. Louis. St. Louis compiled statistics which are the basis of complete understanding of the city’s business, social and population development.
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'BACK TO FARM’ AGAIN Morris Durdene Arrested Here on One of Several Trips. Another “back to the farm” movement was started by Morris Durdene, 37, of 211 Detriot St., when he was arrested Friday. Authorities have had extreme difficulty in keeping Durene on the Indiana State farm. When he first went there in 1926, he escaped and because of that escape was sent to the Indiana State prison when captured. Later he was paroled. In March he got drunk and was shipped to the farm again. Two days later he left. Now he is on his way back, present stopover being made at city prison. RIDES ICE TO DEATH By United Press NIAGARA FALLS, April 14. waving his hat in farewell to the
crew of a trolley car on the Canadian side of the Niagara River Friday an unidentified man rode to his death over the Horseshoe Falls on a cake of ice. The men who witnessed the suicide, T. Moyer and A. Mannette, of Niagara Falls, Ont.,
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.’APRIL 14, 1928
said the man wore a dark gray suit. They said they could see him being carried rapidly toward his death and just as he reached the brink of the falls, he waved his hat in careless fashion. Both responded by waving their hands to him as he went to his death.
