Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 57, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1928 — Page 1
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IT WAS ONE SAD, BAD TIME T. HEENEY HAD All the Fists in World Plastered Over Map of New Zealander. HAPPY WHEN END CAME Tunney Proves Master at All Stages in Scrap for Crown. BY JOE WILLIAMS NEW YORK, July 27.—There isn’t a great deal more to say today about that knuckling party up at the Yankee Stadium last night, other than Mr. Gene Tunney again proved himself to be a pretty fair sort of champion, any way you take him. The Greenwich Villager beat Mr. Heeney the, poor but honest New Zealander, as far as from here to Pekin, China, and three-thirds of the way back, in a scheduled fif-teen-rounder that theoretically involved the heavyweight championship of the world. The end came in the eleventh round, when Mr. Eddie Forbes, the night copyreader of the Brooklyn Eagle, who is addicted to the unique sideline of refereeing these exhibitions of the manly art, stepped in and stopped the alleged contest. Heeney In Distress The challenger’s left eye was Closed. His nose had been bleeding since the fourth round. There were purplish welts on both sides of his face and widening blotches of red under the heart and in the region of the liver. Mr. Heeney, in short was a badly beaten young man, and there was not an audible peep of protest from the worshippers in the sparsely filled pews when Mr. Forbes walked between the two men, one incredibly fresh and unmarked, the other a battered hulk, and sent the alien to his corner. Tom Well Battered Asa matter of fact, Mr. Heeney appeared to be genuinely relieved and if he was disturbed at his failure to bring the championship back to that dear old Ginsborne or Ginsberg, or whatever the name of his home town is, you couldn't tell it by looking at his marcelled pan. Mr. Heeney went along with things getting worse and worse through the first seven rounds. The eighth was even more so and Heeney was in bad shape at the bell. He had displayed a splendid gameness. Between rounds the four Marx Brothers or some set of brothers placed a pint bottle of ambercolored liquid to the lips of Mr. Heeney and for a while it looked as if it would be necessary to call the constabulary to pry the gentleman’s mouth loose from it. Mr. Tammany Young, the gifted gate crasher, vouchsafed, the ( information that it was brandy and not very good brandy at that.” Gets Another Pasting / Mr. Heeney took his customary pasting in the ninth round. By this time he should have been used to it. He had, by my count, lost every round from the start by margins varying from a hands’ width to the length of the State of Texas. To be sure, he had tried and fought spiritedly and shown an eagerness to mix, but after all desire unsupported by technique is seldom a winning formula. With the tenth came the first flash of drama —a flash that even caused Mr. Jack Dempsey, sitting in the press rows and watching his first championship fight, to stir with nervous expectancy. With less than a minute to go, Mr. Tunney, who had been fighting with superb generalship, spurting when spurts meant something, hanging back when that was the thing to do, and even backing up when the firing became too dangerous, saw an opening— Bang! That was Mr. Tunney’s left hook crashing against Mr. Heeney’s jaw. It was beautifully timed and powerfully driven and the challenger began to sag. A moment later Mr. Heeney was half way through the ropes, and in acute distress. There was a look of tolerance on Mr. Tunney’s classic map. Here was a man he would have to knock out and, like the Bangor farmer, “Gosh, how he dreaded it.” He waited with delicately restrained patience until Mr. Heeney had extricated his large flowing ears from the hemp and then he smacked him diligently with a variety of blows, and with just a touch of savagery. Then the Finish Mr. Heeney staggered and reeled and finally fell against the ropes on the other side of the ring and then dropped to th* canvas on his a thoroughly whipped and severely punished battler. But just as his shoulders hit the resin the bell clanged saving him for the nonce. He came out from his corner resolutely and steady enough in eleventh round, but he had nothing to offer beyond a jaw that couldn’t be missed and a dying flickering flame of doggednec:. Then Mr. Referee Forbes, suddenly remembering that he had a late edition to make, called a halt after 2 minutes 52 seconds and nobody complained, least of all Mr. Heeney.
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The Indianapolis Times , Unsettled early tonight, followed by fair and somewhat cooler over Saturday.
VOLUME 40—NUMBER 57
Another Beat Times Gives Fight Fans Usual Fine Service in Title Battle.
TT'IRST on the street with the most complete extra, with all details of the big battle! The Times added another to its long series of beats Thursday night on the Tunney-Heeney world title fistic clash. Almost with the flash that announced Tunney as victor, The Times presses started rolling, to turn out an edition that carried a full blow by blow account of the fight, including the eleventh round that spelled Heeney’s downfall. Added service was given by The Times to hundreds who gathered at The Times office to hear the megaphoned story of the battle as it came over the United Press wires. And millions, all over the nation heard the fight broadcast'made possible by The Times and the twenty-five other Scripps-Howard newspapers. City theaters were packed for the special fight service which this newspaper provided, rushing the blow by blow account direct to Loew’s Palace, the Indiana, the Circle, Keith’s and English's. Streets in the vicinity of the Apollo were jammed, as the fight was rebroadcast by Vitaphone direct from WFBM, which gave radio fans its usual excellent service, for which it is famed in all big sport events.
GIGANTIC POOL SCHEME BARED Witness Tells Court of Winning $1,075. First of a series of Criminal Court trials resulting from the State’s war on baseball pool sellers and alleged lottery operators was in progress today before Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Joseph Rolles, 540 Century Bldg., was on trial for operating a lottery said to total $3,000 in business weekly. John G. Willis, Criminal Court investigator, was on the stand when court resumed this afternoon. The State’s chief witness, Lee Owens, Negro, told of winning a $1000 prize and of a $75 prize. Owens said he received his $1000 check from Ed L. Holmes, 1435 S.. Illinois St., who later took the stand to tell the check was given him for Owens. Holmes was one of the subagents in the gigantic scheme. The box from which the lucky numbers were alleged to have been drawn was to be introduced as a State exhibit, along with a large quantity of tickets seized when Willis raided the Century Bldg, office after Rolles was arrested. Trials of William Denver and Sea Ferguson, Negroes, of 322 N. Senate Ave., were to come up at the conclusion of the Rolles trial. The three Negroes are charged with pool selling. Trial of William Masten, 166 W. Pratt St., was postponed until September with bond raised irom SI,OOO to $5,000. LOCAL DOCTOR HELD Placed Under $5,000 Bonds for Illegal Operation. Dr. J. M. Rhodes, 2408 College Ave., is held under $5,000 bonds in the detention ward at city hospital today on the charge of performing an illegal operation on Miss Ruth Moore, 802 S. West St., who is in the correctional division of the Indiana Women’s Prison for obtaining merchandise under false pretense. Rhodes was arrested ut his home when he returned from West Bader at 2 a. m., today. He declared that he was ill so they took him to the hospital rather than county jail or city prison. PLANS FLIGHT OFF SHIP Woman Intends to Be F rst Passenger Catapulted in f ,ane. Bit United Press PARIS, July 27.—Miss Dorothy Bond, ariving today in the liner lie de France at Cherbourg, said she intended, on her return voyage to New York, Aug. 8, to be the first passenger to be catapulated from a ship in an airplane.
BALLYHOO is an art, and not an unprofitable one for the artist. “Tex” Rickard has the master touch. He’s rich. The boy of the fable who cried "Wolf! Wolf!” when there was no wolf, had the wrong slant on ballyhoo. Because, when the wolf actually did park on his doorstep, so to speak, his friends wouldn't believe his shouts for succor, and there was no assistance forthcoming. The youth suffered dire consequences.
RETRIAL FOR SHUMAKER IS COUNSEL PLEA Appeal to Nation’s High Tribunal to Follow If Plea Is Rejected. ERRORS ARE CHARGED Admission of Depositions by Watson and Wilson Is Attacked. Attorneys for the Rev. E. S. Shumaker superintendent of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League, today filed with Indiana Supreme Court a motion for a rehearing and anew trial of Shumaker on charges of contempt. Supreme Court last week affirmed its decision holding Shumaker in contempt for his 1925 annual report, charging some of its judges were "wet,” and affirmed the sentence of sixty days on Indiana State Farm and fine of $250. The headquarters committee of the And-Saloon League announced Wednesday that Shumaker would appeal to the national Supreme Court on the grounds of free speech. League Stand Explained Only Thursday the Rev. C. H. Winders of this committee issued a long statement explaining the league’s stand. This morning Attorney E. A. Miles of the league appeared at the office of Justice David A. Myers and filed the motion for rehearing and new trial. If the State court overrules the motion, then the appeal to the higher court will be taken. Miles charges in the brief supporting the motion that the court erred in admitting depositions of United States Senator James E. Watson and Henry Lane Wilson, former ambassador to Mexico, in the hearing upon Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom’s motion to increase Shumaker’s punishment. Hits Deposition Acceptance Watson and Wilson, who testified as to a telephone conversation of Watson with Shumaker, were unable to attend personally and Gilliom introduced their depositions. Miles contends the court could not accept depositions in a criminal procedure, such as the contempt case. Attorneys interested in the case pointed out that Supreme Court, in affirming its original sentence of Shumaker upon the basis of his 1925 report, refused to increase the punishment upon the basis of the latei hearing on Gilliom's motion—the one in which the Watson and Wilson deposition were offered. "The motion for anew trial raised just one question/' Miles said, “and that is the error of the court in deciding that in a procedure of this kind it is not governed by rules prevailing in other trials, permitting the defendant to face the witnesses in court.” v Explains His Move "Under our State laws,” Miles said, "you can’t raise a question on appeal that was raised in the trial of the cause, unless it is presented in a motion for anew trial. That explains this action." The attorney said he would proceed with preparation of the writ of error preparatory to the United States Supreme Court appeal, but that no definite step toward carrying the appeal to the high court would be taken until the State court acts on the motion for anew trial. He said he held hope that the State Supreme Court, in light of decisions cited in the motion, would grant the new trial, but that if the motion is denied, a necessary step will have been taken into carrying the appeal to the United States Supreme Court Says Rights Denied Shumaker was denied the right to a trial by jury to determine the law and the facts as guaranteed to him by Section 64, Article 1, Indiana Constitution, the motion contends, and was denied the right to meet the witness face to face, guaranteed to him by Section 58, Article 1, of the constitution. Bingham <te Bingham. Shumaker’s personal attorneys, joined Miles, the league’s attorney, in _ filling the action. The motion is “in good faith” and not “a dilatory plea.” the attorneys said in the memorandum accompanying it. Files Bankruptcy Petition Maurice Hiatt, Richmond auto mechanic, has filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition in Federal Court, listing liabilities of $5,225 and ! assets of S3OO.
SMART BALLYHOO PAYS, BUT ‘WOLF CRIERS’ LOSSE THEIR HARVEST
He didn’t know how to make ballyhoo pay dividends. # n n ALONG Apartment House Row on N. Pennsylvania St. Thursday night, the Cliff Dwellers, in common with several million other fans of gore, listened in on their radio sets to the bloody details of Maestro Rickard’s latest Roman carnival. The announced waxed wildly as the fistic king, Gene Tunney,
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1928
Bells on Their Toes
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“With rings on their fingers and bells on their toes,” Miss Lula Fulkerson, 2947 Cornell Ave. (left), and Mrs. Bernice Krauchie, Apt. D-2, the Graystone, are all ready for the Normal Foot Contest sponsored by The Indianapolis Times and the National Association of ChiropodistsPodiatrists. The young ladies sell shoes at the George J. Marott store and both are enthusiasts on foot health. Dr. H. P. Smith, podiatrist, who has his office in the store, is secretary of the State association.
Money in Feet Prizes, Honors Wait Girl With Most Perfect Foot in City.
T OOK over your feet, girls! They may prove valuable. The Indianapolis Times and the National Association of Chir-opodists-Podiatrists are sponsoring a normal foot contest, in connection with the annual convention of the association here, Aug. 7 to 10. A beautiful group of prizes awaits the Indianapolis woman or girl having the most nearly normal feet. Contestants will be judged by expert podiatrists, prominent members of the association. Complete announcement of the prizes will be published in The Times. mu* THE Indianapolis winner also also will take part in a national contest, meeting winners from other cities in which such contests have been conducted. Dr. Joseph Lelyveld, Rockland. Mass., who is in charge of the normal foot contest, recently examined the feet of America’s Olympic team members, designing special shoes for some of the famous runners on the team. Bring in your photogri ph to The Times with your entry. If you have no recent portraic, The Times will arrange to have its staff photographer take your picture. Call today, and ask for the Foot Contest Editor. He will arrange to have your picture taken and take care of your entry. Thousands of American women suffer agonies with their feet because they wear poorly fitted shoes, or do not take care of their feet properly. Take care of your feet and they will take care of you. n • u EVERY Indianapolis woman should study the condition of her feet, and if they are not healthy get reliable advice and treatment for the trouble. Foot ills cause other illness, and general fatigue, listlessness, and may even lead to nervous disorders which have r rious and lasting effects. , . The Times and the Association of Podiatrists are sponsoring the contest, so that more Indianapolis women may learn the value of healthy feet. So get in touch with the Foot Contest Editor today, and get your entry in the contest. It will mean fame and fortune for some lucky Indianapolis girl. Hourly Temperatures 7a. m 67 10 a. m 78 8 a. m.... 69 11 a. m.... 81 9a. m 74 12 (noon).. 82
shoved the tottering challenger against the ropes at Yankee Stadium and smacked him for what the referee decided was a knockout. The big fight was over, another triumph of ballyhoo. a u a EVEN before the ether audience could disconnect from the ringside, down the street came the call: “Extra! Extra! All about the Tunney fight.”
URGE SEPARATE DRIVE Seeks Means of Throwing Off Link With Jackson. Behind the back of the Republican State committee, efforts were made by intimates of Harry G. Leslie, Republican nominee for Governor, at a secret meeting in the Lincoln late Thursday, to form a parallel State committee devoted exclusively to Leslie’s candidacy. For two hours, from 4 to 6 p. m., the Leslie devotees, assembled by quiet invitation of Bert C. Fuller, Leslie’s campaign manager, debated plans for a militant organization in their favorite's behalf and argued ways and means for disassociating Leslie’s candidacy from the disrepute into which the organization - indorsed Jackson administration had fallen. Conferees from over the State brought reports of the widespread demand for a “political housecleaning” and frankly were perturbed by reports of the public’s unwillingness to regard Leslie as anything more than a prospective heir to “rule of the old Statehouse gang,” it was learned. Before the session, Fuller and Bert Morgan, strong Leslie man, who failed as "liaison agent” between Hoover and Leslie headquarters in the primary, insisted no meeting was called and that “just a few of Lesl‘e’s friends were dropping in to discuss the issues.” NAB CORNER ‘COWBOYS’ Eleven Youths Are Arrested in Front of Drug Store. Charges of congregatirg were placed against eleven young men who, police declared, were “drug store cowboys” Thursday night, when they were found in front of a store at Oliver Ave., and Division St. They ranged in age from 17 to 22. Reports that women ?.nd girls passing the places were subjected to remarks of the youths caused Police Chief Claude M. Worley to dispatch Sergt. John Wilson to the scene. The drive was continued in other parts of the city where similar conditions are said to exist. LEVINE DISCUSSES HOP r Arrives in France to Confer With Miss 801 l on Ocean Flight. p<i United Brest PARIS, July 27.—Charles A. Levine and Bert Acosta, arriving at Cherbourg in the lie De France today, proceeded at once to Deauville to join Miss Mabel 801 l to confer regarding a westward trans-Atlantic airplane flight.
Apartment dwellers made a rush for the street. They had heard the scrap. Now to check up their impressions with what the papers had to say about it. “Extra! Extra! All about the Tunney fight.” “Here boy. let’s have one.” “The papers aren’t out yet; we’re taking orders!” And the crowd of young boys ballyhooed on along the thoroughfare. Picture this modern “Wolf! Wolf!” repeated three times, and
Entered as Second-Class Matter at I’ostoffice, Indianapolis
SLACK IS MAYOR, STATE SUPREME COURT RULES, DECIDING AGAINST HOGUE
Just Can't See Autoist Wrecks House, but Is Indignant When Arrested.
THERE'S something about these Indianapolis policemen which just simply is puzzling Chester Quinn to death. Quinn, 1 who is 22 and craves excitement, doesn’t understand the psychology of the mind of a man who won’t let a fellow drive his own automobile the way he wants to. Last Monday, at Nineteenth St. and Cornell Ave., Quinn decided suddenly that the street wasn’t wide enough. Over the curb he went, according to witnesses, and then there was some lawn to cross. The mere fact that a house got in the way did not deter his automobile, and he pushed part of the house of the way and got into the street. Policemen don’t move as fast as that and Quinn wasnt’ arrested until today. He was indignant. "I’m Tom Mix,” he told officers, "I don’t keep my hands on the steering wheel.” "Yeh, but you and that automobile don’t mix,” Lieut. Frank Owens responded; "maybe you can mix with the judge.” "Shucks," said Chester, “my old bus (the old bus happens to be a dilapidated affair of a popular price), won’t make but 95.” “Ninety-five what?” said the lieutenant. “Why ninety-five miles an hour, of course.” “Yeh, I thought maybe it was 95 rattles a minute.” “Well, it doesn’t rattle.” “No, some other things don’t either, because there’s nothing in them to rattle.” “You’re not insinuating?” “No, just stating.” And Chester is puzzled. NAB POSTAL THIEF State Officers Catch Man Robbing' Postoffice. Earl Walker, 38, Kennard, Ind., Is held in Hancock County jail today after being caught robbing the till in the Greenfield, Ind., postoffice Thursday night, by State police. Capt. Joseph Shinn and Officers Fred Martin, Merle Remley and Ralph Fisher, were in Greenfield on the trail of automobile thieves. They heard glass crashing and found that it was at the rear door of the postoffice. Entering they found Walker with $1.75 he had taken from the till. Later he confessed a S4O store burglary in a Knightstown department store, Shinn said. The man has a record at Indiana State Farm and the Federal penitentary at Leavenworth, Kan. Later the State officers arrested James Taylor, Alexandria, Ind., and Ralph Roland, Knightstown, on vehicle taking charges. They are alleged to have been driving a coupe stolen in Anderson. FINDS $25,000 IN GEMS Taxi Driver Discovers Box Left on Car’s Running Board, Btl United Press CHICAGO, July 27.—Carter Tronstad, taxicab driver, found a small black box on the running board of his taxi and took it home to his wife for a vanity case. When they opened the box they found $25,000 worth of diamonds and pearls. Tronstad was awake all night standing guard over the box with a gun. He returned it today to his company headquarters. It war > earned the box belonged to Lieut. W. E. Herd, who is en route with his family to Coco Sola, Canal Zone, where he will take charge of the United States Navy submarine base. "Rubberneck Planes” Launched. NEW YORK, July 27.—The “rubberneck” sight-seeing busses now have competition from the air. An aerial sight-seeing service was inaugurated today by a local travel bureau, which has two flying boats.
picture the crowds of prospective buyers before each multiplex residence increasing with every false alarm. a a a TANARUS) ALLYHOO! Young America, ■*-* drumming up trade! The battle ended in the eleventh round, minutes before the scheduled close of the fifteen-round bout. Older and wiser leather-lunged exponents of ballyhoo waited close to the, street distrbution centers of the newspapers. Let
Long Battle Over City’s Executive Chair Finally Is Settled, With- Both Contenders Eliminated. MANY IMPORTANT MOVES HELD UP —- t Decision Expected to Clear Way for Hospital Building, Track Elevation and Street Widening. State Supreme Court today removed the final cloud from the title of L. Ert Slack as mayor of Indianapolis, when it decided against Joseph L. Hoguo in his afjpeal of his quo warranto suit to have himself declared mayor. The court turned down the appeal of Ira M. Holmes, the other claimant to the mayor’s office, last week. Hogue had sought the office on the ground that John L. Duvall, whom Slack replaced through a city council election, never legally succeeded Samuel Lewis Shank as mayor, because of alleged corrupt practices in the election, and therefore Shank legally continued as mayor.
KELLOGG WILL SIGN IN PARIS i % Sets Aug. 18 for Sailing to French Parley. Bjf United Press WASHINGTON, July 27.—Secretary of State Kellogg formally announced today that France had invited him to Paris to sign the antiwar treaty, and indicated he would accept. The signing will take place either Aug. 27 or 28, and Kellogg will remain in Paris only long enough to accomplish this purpose, he said. He denied publish >d reports that while in the Freni h capital he would c’iscuses with the French, British and German foreign ministers the question of anew internation agreement involving war debts and reparations. Arrangements have been made for Kellogg to sail on the Ide De France, Aug. 18, from New York, with his private secretary, William H. Beck, and probably also Mrs. Kellogg. J. Theodore Marriner, chief of the we? m European division of the State Department, will sail next Wednesday to make advance preparations. PROBES BOY’S CHARGES OF JAIL MISTREATMENT State Charities Official Investigates Imprisonment in “Hole.” Secretary John A. Brown of the State Charities Board today continued to investigate alleged mistreatment of prisoners at Marion County jail. The investigation started Thursday after Lyle Conover, 16 of 1802 Ashland Ave., told Criminal Judge James A. Collins how he and seven other youths were cast into an iron dungeon called “the hole” because they tipped over a bench at the mess table. Brown went at once to question the youths. Deputy Sheriff Sam Parker, Negro, admitted putting the youths, all under 22, into “the hole.” Sheriff Omer Hawkins said he knew nothing of it. Asks Padlocks for Forty Places Bu United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 27. Forty padlock cases have been filed in the Ft. Wayne division of the United States District Court as a result of the sweeping dry raids at Ft. Wayne three weeks ago, District Attorney Oliver Loomis, announced here today. Former University Head Dies Bn United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 27. The Rev. Joseph N. Donahue, C. S. C., president of Columbia University, Portland,* Ore., until July 1, died suddenly in St. Joseph’s Hospital today. He had been ill for two months.
those young kids yell, the experts expected to get the pennies. “Extra! Extra! Tunney K. O’s--Heeney!” Young and unexperienced ballyhooers rushed back for their papers to fill their “orders” and returning looking for their customers. Vanished were the waiting throngs, thejr small change dispensed to the veteran newsboys who did not cry “Wolf!” but cashed in on the publicity by the voices. There is an art in ballyhoo, and for the masters, profits.
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Hogue contended that since he was city controller , under Shank, and Shank should have continued as mayor, he, Hogue, legally became mayor upon the death last year of Shank. When Slack, who had waited in his office far past the lunch hour, was told of the decision, he smiled, but refused comment. Many Moves Held Up However, it is known that he has been holding up many important administration moves until assured he was not to be thrown out of officeThe administration has been unable to sell bonds for many important improvements because of the cloud on Slack’s title. With this removed, the city hospital building, the Shelby St. pavement, track elevation and street widening movements are expected to be given new impetus. It also Is known that Slack for months has contemplated important changes in city hall personnel, but has withheld action because he did not desire to alter the municipal machine, only to have the city thrown into anew uproar in case Hcgue or Holmes were put in his place. Willoughby Writes Decision Justice Benjamin Willoughby wrote the decision upholding Slack’s claim. Justice Julius C. Travis dissented. Hogue, reached at his farm near Greenwood, said: “So far as I’m concerned that settles it. I am glad the decision has been handed down, although I think it should have been much sooner.” The mayoralty tangle grew out of the ouster of Duvall by city council last October after Duvall was convicted of violating the corrupt practices act in an alleged promise of the privilege of naming -officials to William H. Armitage. Negley Takes Office While city council was declaring Duvall’s office vacant Duvall suddenly resigned, permitting his wife, who was city controller, to succeed him. She named Holmes controller and then resigned, attempting to let him become mayor. Claude E. Negley, council president, became the acting mayor, although he and Holmes both sat in the office until Negley got a court order temporarily setting Holmes aside. In ten days the council elected Slack as the permanent mayor. Meanwhile, Holmes and Hogue began their contesting suits in county court. The court upheld the decision of Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin -’n turning down Hogue’s claim. The Supreme Court decision of today holds that Hogue’s theory of succession is wrong because he was not in fact city controller at the time died, even if his theory that Shank continued to mayor because Duvall might not legally have been elected. Hogue Out With Shank The court held that “within the statutes” both Shank’s -ind Hogue’s tenure of office ended Jan. 4, 1926, when Shank turned over his office to William C. Buser, Duvall’s appointee as city controller. Before he could prosecute his claim to the mayorship by succession to the mayorship to re-establish himself as city controller by proving that Buser illegally succeded him, the court held. la foUette honored MADISON. Wis., July 27.—A wreath lies on the grave of the late Senator Robert M. La Follette today, inscribed “to the greatest opponent of injunctions in labor disputes from those who have suffered from injunctions.” It was placed by striking hosiery plant employes. CAR HEAT UP? REED-HERR CO. cleans radiators.—Advertisement
