Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 101, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1928 — Page 3

SETPT. 17, 1928-

SMITH AL ON WAY TO SHOW WEST HIS BROWNJERBY Democrat Nominee to Open Campaign Tuesday Night at Omaha. BY THOMAS L. STOKES United Press Staff Correspondent ABOARD GOVERNOR SMITH'S SPECIAL TRAIN EN ROUTE TO OMAHA, Sept. 17.—Governor Alfred E. Smith was on his way today for his brown derby campaign to win the West. The derby, a bright, shiny one, was tucked away in the luxurious special car which carried the Democratic candidate through the Middle West for the first elaboration of his stand on agricultural relief and other issues since he accepted his party’s nomination for President. He will open his campaign Tuesday night at Omaha with a detailed analysis of his position on the farm relief problem, the dominant issue in that vast territory beyond the Mississippi, much of which the former east side boy will see for the first time on his tour. Governor Smith slept late today, recuperating from the strain of his last day in Albany, when he personally superintended the packing for the tour. Has Big Sendoff He had an arduous physical task, too, in getting through the crowds of Albany citizens which packed the station to wish him farewell and good luck. It was an old-fashioned “red fire” sendoff. As Smith and Mrs. Smith and their daughter, Mrs. John A. Warner, stepped from their car at the station there was the sputter from a score of torches and the street was emblazoned with the brilliant crimson glow. The crowd set up a tremendous whoop. Smith wore his brown derby. “Good luck, Al,” they shouted.'* "Bring back the West.” State troopers had to elbow with all their might to open a path through the crowd. Inside the station they met a larger crowd. The Governor was escorted to the middle of the waiting room, and there was presented with a huge basket of flowers and a horseshoe made of yellow chrysanthemums. Train Equipped With Radio The special car in which the candidate and his party are traveling, the St. Nicholas, belonging to William F. Kenny—is equipped with three radio receiving sets, so that the candidate at all times may keep closely in touch with what goes on in the world he leaves behind him and that before him, especially campaign developments. Tonight he will tune in on Hoover’s speech at Newark, N. J„ and if there is any issue raised there that he thinks should be met he will meet it, as is his custom, and as he has promised. The train’s first scheduled stop is for an hour at Chicago tonight. The train is scheduled to reach Omaha at 9:30 a. m. Tuesday for the speech that night. From Omaha the Governor will proceed southward to Oklahoma City for a speech Thursday night to bolster up Democratic forces in that State, where Republicans are making a threat. Then he will turn Northward toward Denver, where he will speak Saturday night. The following week he will make addresses at Helena, Mont.; St. Paul and Milwaukee, before turning eastward for Rochester, where he will address the State Democratic convention on Oct. 1. From Rochester the Governor will return to Albany for a few days’ rest before starting on the second leg of his campaign. He will show himself- widely in the West by over thirty short stops, ranging from fifteen minutes to an hour. At some of the latter he will enter the city for a formal welcome.

Travels Through New Country Smith has visited but two of the cities in which he will make addresses, Omaha and Denver. He attended the Democratic convention in the latter city in 1968 and was in Omaha on his return from this convention and from the San Francisco convention in 1920. He will travel through new country to him on the route through the northwest. Two western political figures are making the trip, former Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock of Nebraska, who is accompanied by Mrs. Hitchcock, and National Committeeman Bruce Kremer of Montana. Hitchcock lives in Omaha. He will leave the train there, but Kremer wi'l make the entire trip. Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana is expected to join the train in the west and also National Committeeman Scott Ferris of Oklahoma. CONFER ON G. 0. P. PUSH State Leaders in Washington and Chicago for Discussions. Republican campaign plans for Indiana were scheduled for conferences in Washington and Chicago today and Tuesday. Elza O. Rogers, Republican State chairman, will confer with national leaders of Herbert Hoover’s presidential campaign at the capital Tuesday. Oscar G. Foellinger, head of the State Hoover-for-President Club, was to discuss campaign tactics with James W. Good, Hoover’s western manager at Chicago today. Rogers headed a delegation of Hoosier Republicans who went to Evansville todya to hear Senator Curtis, vice presidential nominee. Wallace to Attend Parley Frank Wallace,State entomologist, will attend an international corn borer conference a,t Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 27-28. The meeting was called by the United States Department of Agriculture at the request of Dean C. F. Curtiss of lowa State Agriculture College, chairman of the international committee on corn borer.

IS ON HIS WAY WEST TO ANGLE FOR FARM VOTE

Butler U. in Its New Home; 1,800 Enrollment Is Expected

.

Above—New Butler University Arthur Jordan building. Below (left to right)—Upperclassmen registering in the new administration building are: Martha :Jenkins, Orleans, Ind.; Virginia Hampton, 3340 N. Meridian St., and N. E. Patrick, 1220 N. New Jersey St. Miss Hampton is a senior, while Miss Jenkins and Patrick are sophomores.

VISIT SUNNYSIDE 2,000 Attend Homecoming at Sanitorium Sunday. More than 2,000 persons attended the fifth annual homecoming celebration at Sunnyside Tuberculosis Sanitorium Sunday. Former patients, friends and relatives of patients and persons interested in the hospital were visitors. Two orchestras played during the visiting hours and refreshments were served. Visitors Were taken on tours of inspection. Work in basketry, needlework, hooked rugs, woven and penciled scarfs, pillows, plaques and lamp shades made in the occupational therapy department were on display. Most of the material exhibited was purchased by guests. Mrs. Gertrude Stagg Kessler, social service director for the four and one-half years, was presented with a silver pitcher and tray. She will resign her position Thursday.

HUG SHOP LOOTED Stores, Homes Entered; Cars Robbed. Prowlers early today carted away seventy-five small rugs valued at $225 from the John Bor ton Rug' Shop, 1618 N. Delaware St., looted two other business establishments, several homes, and took articles from two parked automobiles. Entering the home of Oliver W. Cushman, 627 N. Oakland Ave., they obtained jewelry valued at $lB5 and a gun. Others who reported thefts: Herbert Friege confectionery, 437 W. Twenty-ixth St., $25 and merchandise S3O; Cole Grove store, 3724 E. Pratt St., cigaret case and a bunch of keys; Harry L. Adair, 631 N. Oakland Ave., $55 jewelry; Edna .Osborn, 1601% S. Meridian St., suit case and clothing valued at $l5O taken from parked car; Edward L. Hall, 4833 Guilford Ave., SSO watch; Alfred Clark. 4711 Guilford Ave., S2O watch; Mrs. Henrietta Leete, 3620 Washington Blvd., $75 watch. GET TIP ON PHAYER Texas Dispatch May Give Light on Past. Further light upon the past of Charles J. Phayer, 32, of East St. Louis, held on a charge of complicity in the Broadmoor Country Club SIOO,OOO jewel robbery of May 30, may be thrown by a Times dispatch from El Paso, Texas, today. Ben Boratti, who says he is a deputy sheriff from El Paso, was arrested with Phayer in St. Louis two weeks ago. Boratti declared he just had met Phayer through a mutual friend. According to the El Paso dispatch today a C. J. Phayer was there last summer representing himself to be president of a State prosecuting attorney and sheriffs’ association, soliciting advertising for a year book. Seth Omdorff, El Paso sheriff, was vice president of the socalled association. A man named Boratti was with Phayer as a salesman in Texas, according to the dispatch. If you’re looking for a pedigreed pet at a reasonable price turn to the Pet and Livestock Classification of tonight’s Times Want Ads.

New Jordan Building One of Finest of Its Kind; Classes Wednesday. Butler University officially moved into home at Fairview today with registration of upperclassmen in the new Arthur Jordan building. Freshmen will sign up Tuesday and scholastic wheels will start grinding in earnest Wednesday. Approximately 1,800 students are ejected to enroll today and Tuesday, according to Miss Sarah E, Cotton, registrar. Already more than 250 freshmen have been taken care of through correspondence. The new Jordan building, composed of three units and forming one side of a proposed central quadrangle, has been erected at a cost of $1,000,000 and is considered by architectural experts one of the finest structures of its kind. Many Offices Housed It contains the office of administration, seventy-five recitation rooms, a library, college of liberal arts and religion, a science hall, physics and chemistry labatories, departments of domestic science and a botanical conservatory, including a herbarium and greenhouse. The fieldhouse, with a seating capacity of 15,000, contains the swimming pool, a gymnasium with no cross beams to obstruct the view fromny of the 15,000 seats. An underground tunnel leads from the fieldhouse to the bottom of the new Butler bowl, attractive structure with a present seating capacity of 31,600. Provision has been made to increase the size of the bowl to accommodate 60,000 spectators. Cost Nearly 3 Millions

Cost of the new Butler project has been close to $3,000,000 and other buildings are planned, said Dr. Robert J. Aley, who is startihg his eight year as president of the institution. The new Butler movement began in 1920, when a city office was organized and John W. Atherton was named executive and financial secretary. Since then assets have been increased from $730,000 to exceeding $4,800,000, and attendance has been doubled. Members of the Butler University building committee are William G. Irwin, chairman; Arthur Jordan, vice chairman; John W. Atherton, secretary - treasurer; Hilton U. Brown, Arthur V. Brown, William C. Smith, Emsley W. Johnson and President Robert J. Aley. SOBBING WOMAN LEADS IN POKER GAME HOLDUP Players Find Armed Trio When They Unbolt Door, Lose $5,000. Bn United Press BROOKLYN, Sept. 17.—Tenderhearted players lost $5,000 and a rookie policeman, off duty, had his badge stolen, all because of a woman’s sobs. Twelve men, playing two tables in a Coney Island basement in the small hours of the morning, heard a woman sobbing violently outside. One of the players opened the door. Two men and a woman entered and held the group up with pistols. The bandits took about $2,000 in cash and jewelery valued at $3,000. One of the players, a policeman off duty, was relieved of his badge. ARREST TOTAL IS 187 Police arrests over the week-end totaled 187, vagrancy leading with fifty-nine. Fifty-six were charged with drunkenness, thirty-three with gaming, eleven with operating a blind tiger, eleven with driving while drunk, three with speeding and five with traffic law violations.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

OBSERVEJOLY WEEK Jewish People Prepare for Yom Kippur, Sunday. A week of preparation for the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, which starts at sundown, Sunday, Sept. 23, was started today by the Jewish families of Indianapolis. The ceremony lasts from sundown to sundown and those of the orthodox faith fast for that period. All of the Jewish temples in the city will have special services. The celebration of Roshashona, the New Year’s, closed at sundown Sunday. It was begun at sundown Friday. MAP STUMP TOUR Democrats Aided by National Speakers in State. Democratic orators from the national speakers’ bureau will join State and county candidates in campaigning the State this week. Congressman Robert L. Henry, Texas, and Frank C. Dailey will be the speakers at Mooresville Saturady night. Henry’s program calls for addresses at Knightstown on Wednesday, Greenwood Thursday, and Lebanon Friday. Senator A. O. Stanley of Kentucky speaks at New Albany tonight and at Lawrence Tuesday night. Dailey and Arthur J. Hamrick, candidate for Secretary of State, will conclude two days’ activity in Allen County Friday, with a meeting in Ft. Wayne. Albert Stump, Democratic senatorial nominee, will speak at Newcastle tonight. Tuesday night Stump and Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewis will make addresses at South Bend. Stump will be heard in every county in the Tenth District on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

CHURCHMEN MEET Mayor Greets Evangelical Delegates. “A large percentage of the troubles of municipal governments,” Mayor L. Ert Slack said in his address of welcome to the seventh national convention of Evangelical brotherhoods at the Zion Evangelical Church this morning, “are dut to petty politics and destructive criticism. “Os the four great units of government, the city is most difficult to handle, because the government? is closest to the people. They do not have such contact with the Federal, State or county government. The mayor is personally held responsible for everything that goes wrong, whether a street is torn up or a garbage collector fails to come around. “The city welcomes this brotherhood to the city,” he concluded. “Every community needs a soulstirring that we may have less of the disturbance that comes from the criticism that is a mere assault on government. We must set our heads against such criticism and have confidence in government; we welcome men who have such confidence.” Communion service at 9 a. m. was shared by 250 delegates. The Rev. F. P. Puhlmen of Cumberland conducted the service, at which Dr. J. Baltzer delivered .the sermon. „

NAB YOUTH AS HIT-RUN DRIVER OF DEATH CAR Lawrence Graham, Trailed by Motorist, Arrested for Negro’s Death. Lawrence Graham, 19, nephew of Dr. Hanah Graham, with whom he lived at 2126 N. Meridian St., was arrested early Sunday on a chyge of involuntary manslaughter. His bond was set at $3,000. Police charge he was driver of the automobile which fatally injured Otis Keys, 23, Negro. 530 W. TwentySxith St., at Twenyt-Fifth St. and Northwestern Ave., at 2 a. m. Sunday. J. E. Singer, 3310 N. Illinois Stdriving north on the avenue, saw a man roll in the street through the rear view mirror of his automobile. He followed the car which sped by him and gave the Jicense number to the police. Mrs. A. J. Miller, 620 W. Twenty-Ninth St., also witnessed the accident. When Lieut. Otto Petit and a squad arrested Graham he denied the charge, but police said the radiator of his car was badly dented and buttons from Key’s shirt were found in the honeycomb. Keys died at city hospital. Hit on Way to Work En route to work early this morning, William Daugherty, 56, 1044 S. Rowena St., Ben Davis, was seriously injured when hit by a neighbor's automobile. Charles Armstrong, 1019 Rowena St., driver of the car, took Daugherty to Robert Long Hospital. The accident occurred near the homes of the two men when Daugherty became confused in crossing the street and leaped into the path of Armstrong's car. Struck by a 15-year-old hit-and-run driver, John Burke, 9, 2510 N. Talbott St., suffered a fractured collar bone and severe cuts and bruises Sunday night. Nab Y'outhful Driver The driver, Francis McNaught, 2354 Kenwood Ave., was arrested and faces charges of assault and battery, failure to stop after an accident, and failure to show a minor’s driving certificate. Others injured in week-end accidents: Russell Welch, 5, of 1741 Olive Ave.; Charles E. Rost, 28, of 2725 N. Meridian St.; Mrs. Hazel Fletcher, 53, of 1512 English Ave.; Mrs. Rau 58, of 1534 Brookside Ave.; William Miller, 43, of 1428 English Ave; Mrs. Charles Reichart, 61, Scott La Fary, 19, of 1806 E. Minnesota St.; Kenneth Botkin, 20, of 1739 E. Minnesota St.; Benjamin Bland, 51, of 1732 Hall St., and Mrs. Earl Phil lips, 635 Collier St.

SLAIN NEGRO FOUND Hold Couple; Body Taken to Deserted H.ouse. Clothed only in undergarments, the body of John Harris, 55, Negro, 818 N. West St., was found early this morning in a vacant house at 723 Lafayette St. Stabbed five times, the body apparently had been dragged to its hiding place from the Lohrman apartments, 72412 N. Senate Ave., 100 yards away. Police found blood stains on the dining room floor of apartment No. 2 in the apartment building, which is occupied by George Moorman, a dining car waiter, and Nettie Edwards. The two were held for questioning. Moorman, who at first refused to talk, told police Harris and several other men had an altercation in the dining room of the apartment. It was said that the slain man had won SI,OOO in a baseball pool Sunday, but whether he had collected his winnings police have not learned. No trace of Harris’ clothing has been found.

Monkey Shines Motor Cops and Pet Stage ‘Circus’ or> House Top: Chased.

A CIRCUS came to town this morning. More than 100 persons witnessed the show and applauded its principal performers—a monkey and two motorcycle patrolmen. The curtain was rung up by the monkey, who started performing antics on the roof of a house at 1217 N. Pershing Ave. Enter the motor cops, Tony Debarr and Willis Thompson, who were called to the scene. Debarr climbed to the roof after the irrepressible monk and the monk descended. A pursuit followed. Several dogs, giving way to the trooping instinct, joined the monkey. The crowd, laughing and applauding, grew. For more than two miles the chase continued, until at last the chief performer was captured in . the 900 block on N. Belmont Ave. The monkey is the property of Roy Wilson, 1401 N. Tremont Ave. He escaped early this morning. predict Tabor for al “Governor Smith will receive the great majority of the votes of the laboring people,” was the claim today of Thomas McHugh, Indiana State chairman of the Democratic Labor Bureau. Labor’s support for Smith is assured, McHugh declared, “because of his record as Governor of New York, where he has so constructively demonstrated his knowledge of the needs and desires of the laboring man.” -

Girl ‘Alky’Ring’s Dupe

N? p v iaUB £ ' f j V . * *

HOOVER LAUNCHES TWO-DAY C AMPAIGN INTO NEW JERSEY

Sure of Herb By Times Special ATLANTA, Ind., Sept. 17. Joseph Lafeber, Civil War veteran, here on a visit from California, has declared that he will remain here in his home town until Hoover is elected President, regardless of when that may be.

OFFICER SLAIN, SERVINGMTICE Killer Also Shoots Deputy; Now in Marion Jail. By Times Special MARION. Ind., Sept. 17.—Fred Certain, Grant County deputy sheriff, is in good condition today, despite bullet wounds inflicted by D. B. Harvey after he had shot to death Constable Frank Uzy. Harvey was wounded slightly in a gun battle with Certain. Sheriff Jacob C. Campbell and Police Chief Lewis Lindenmuth. Uzy went to Harvey’s home to summon him lo a justice court in a suit to collect a note. The officer was shot down by Harvey in the yard of the home. Harvey then dragged the body to a porch, barricaded himself in the house and gave battle to the three other officers, called after the constable was slain. Harvey attempted a dash to liberty under cover of a shower of lead and in the exchange of shots he and Certain were struck. The slayer is a prisoner in the county jail here, his wounds not being severe enough to warrant hospital treatment. At the sheriff’s office this morning, it was said Harvey had made no statement regarding the tragedy.

3 HURT JN PLANE Woman Critical After Crash ' at Local Field. p Mrs. Rheba Bradford, 21, of 2134 Shelby St., was in a critical condition in city hospital today as a re-

suit of injuries, received in an airplane crash at Indianapolis airport Sunday evening, in which two other persons were injured. The plane, owned and piloted by Wylie W. Carter 33, of Bloomington, Ind., crashed from a height of about 1,200 feet when it went into a power spin. Carter was cut and bruised and

Mrs. Rheba Bradford

Henry Dillman, 21, of Bloomington, received head lacerations and a broken left arm. The two passengers were guests of Carter who said he had a Government permit to fly, but had not yet taken an examination to permit him to carry passengers for hire. AID IS GIVEN VETERANS Legion Helps Recover Funds From United States Members. Through the efforts of the national rehabilitation committee of the American Legion $2,788,301 was recovered from the Government for World War Veterans and their dependents last year, according to the committee’s annual report, which will be presented at the national convention in San Antonio Oct. 8-12. The cash recoveries were in the form of disability compensation, insurance and adjusted compensation.

The Philadelphia grand jury, busy investigating bootlegging and illegal alcohol sales, was no more surprised than Miss Annie Cooney, 20-year-old stenographer, when it was revealed she was the “owner” of a huge industrial alcohol plant alleged to have done a business mounting into the millions of dollars. Papers she was said to have innocently signed at the direction of her employers transferred title to the plant to her, it was said.

Thrust Near Smith Center Marks Opening of Eastern Drive. BY PAUL R. MALLON United Press Staff Correspondent ABOARD SPECIAL HOOVER TRAIN EN ROUTE to NEWARK, N. J., Sept. 17.—Herbert Hoover set out today on a two-day trip through industrial northern New Jersey, opening his speaking campaign in the East. With Mrs. Hoover and their son Alan, he left Washington at 8:30 a. m. today in a private car attached to a four-car special train, bound for the New Jersey “battleground.” In an address at Newark tonight he will lay down his campaign promises to labor, and during today and Tueday he plans to motor through a half a dozen New Jersey towns, seeing perhaps half a million people. It is a tremendouly Important trip for the Republican presidential nominee as it will bring him close to New York City, the region where Al Smith claims to be strongest. His speech will be the first he has made east of lowa since his nomination. It will alo mark the first of the series of four campaign speeches he intenas to deliver before he starts west the latter part of October to vote. Newark This Afternoon Leaving Washington after breakfast on a Pennsylvania railroad special train, the nominee will arrive at Newark at 2 p. m. daylight savings time. He will be greeted at the station by Senator Walter E. Edge, New Jersey, and prominent State leaders who will accompany him through the city and through suburban municipalities of Essex County, including Belleville, Bloomfield, Glen Ridge, Montclair and Verona. He will lay a wreath on Washington monument in Newark and visit the birthplace of Grover Cleveland at Caldwell. A buffet supper will be given to the nominee, Mrs. Hoover and forty members of the Newark reception committee by former Senator Joseph S. Frelinghuysen. Aut6 Trip Over State An old fashioned torchlight parade has been arranged prior to the delivery of the speech in the First Regiment Armory. He will spend the night at the hortte of Thomas Edison at East Orange. He will inspect the Edison plant during the afternoon. Tuesday morning there will be an automobile parade through Hudson and Bergen counties and inspection trip to the Newark airport. Senator Edge will be host at a lunchem at the Elks Club. Hoover then will start on an automobile trip across the State to Trenton, stopping to greet crowds at New Brunswick, Elizabeth, Princeton and other towns along the way. He will board the train Tuesday afternoon at Trenton and return to Washington.

GIBLIN FUNERAL SET Services for Retired Policeman to Be Held Wednesday. Funeral services for Frank Giblin, 68, of 927 Bates St., former policeman, will be held at 9 a. m. Wednesday at Holy Cross Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. Giblin died at his home Sunday after six weeks of illness. He joined the police force in 1886 and was retired in 1922. Frank J. Giblin, a patrolman, and David Giblin, sons, the widow and three daughters survive. Injured Man’s Sister Sought Efforts are being made to locate Esther Carlein. The Indianapolis police received a telegram from Katie Barnett of Akron, Ohio, stating Ester Carlein’s brother was seriously injured and is in the Peoples Hospital at Akron, Ohio.

PAGE 3

STRAY DOGS TO BE IMPOUNDED IN RABIES WAR All Unleashed Animals to Be Picked Up Under New Ruling. City dog pound attaches today began enforcement of the sixty-day dog quarantine, ordered by the city heath board in the fight to stop the rabies epidemic. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city sanitarian, ordered impounded all dogs caught off premises of their owners without a leash. The dogs must be in tow even if they are accompanied away from home by the owner. Four persons were bitten by dogs over the week-end. The quarantine was the result of a conference of State and city health authorities in which it was disclosed that attacks by dogs in Marion County are more numerous than elsewhere in Indiana, being even higher than the greater population of Indianapolis would explain.* Two persons have died of rabies in the last few weeks. The board of safety will confer with Dr. Morgan Tuesday. If necessary an addiitonal dog catching crew will be employed to enforce the quarantine, Dr. Morgan said. The four dogs which bit persons during the week-end were ordered penned up for observation. Mrs. J. H. Carr, 522 W. FortyFirst St., reported her son, John, 8, was bitten by a dog owned by Mrs. J. E. Nelson, 627 Bernard St, The boy was treated at city hospital. A police dog owned by Edward Tarugott, 5455 College Ave., bit Reid Chapman, 8, of 5649 College Ave., as the youth was running down the street, police said. The bite was not believed serious and Mrs. Traugott told police the dog had been vaccinated against rabies. Mrs. May Goodhue, 2622 BrookJ side Ave., reported she was bitten bm a dog owned by Mrs. Anna Harve* 1842 Rural St. At small pup owneA by Paul Schealey, 741 N. East. SA bit Dale Callaway, 4, of 733 N. E St. J

WOMAN NAMED HOOVER| CLUB VICE CHAIRMAN Mrs. Russel! McFall to Aid Drive In Marion County. Mrs. Russell T. McFall, wife of the former city sanitary commissioner, today lent her assitance to the Hoover campaign as vice chairman of the Marion County Hoover-for-President Club, upon appointment of Judge Mahlon E. Bash of the Marion County Probate Court, president, and Claude H. Anderson, secretary, of the club. \ More than one hundred prominent Indianapolis men and women were named as members of the advisory committee. Dr. Harry E. Barnard, former State food and drug commissioner, in charge of Hoover-for-President Club headquarters, 106 Monument Circle, returned Saturday from Washington, where he had conferred with national campaign leaders. TWO COUPLES'REMAIN IN SKATING MARATHOH Endurance Test Passes 550th Hour at Broad Ripple. Two couples remained in tha Broad Ripple skating marathon at noon today. Earl Decker and Margaret Smith dropped out at 6 a. m, today. This is the twenty-fourth day of the contest and marks the passing of more than 550 hours. Goldie Rlcheye, Kenneth Bennett; Herman Harsh, Ruth Jay; and Margaret Smith still are rolling toward tha two prizes—s3so for the winning couple and SIOO second money. I. U. OFFERS FILMS Schools and Other Groups Als<| Can Obtain Slides. Bi/ Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Seept. 17, —More than 1,300,000 feet of motion pictures and 25,000 lantern slides on a wide range of subjects are offered at cost to schools, farm bureaus, clubs and other groups in Indiana by the bureau of visual instruction of the Indiana extension division. Mr. H. W. Norman, bureau director, reports that 800 schools and other groups in Indiana are served annually through the visual library. “Approximately 250,000 different persons are reached annually by tha bureau of visual instruction and the aggregate attendances at all showings exceed $2,500,000,” announces Norman. deny ' pastor “label’. Man Fined on Drunk Charge Not Minister, Says Nazarene. The Rev. Howard Paschal, pastor of the First Nazarene Church, today declared that the Rev. William Ritchey, 829 College Ave., fined $25 and given a suspended 30-day jail sentence by Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron Friday on a drivlng-while-iptoxicated charge, is not a Nazarene minister, as police had been led to believe. CITY AUTHOR BURIED Rites Held Today for Miss Emm* Augusta Mullen. Funeral services for Miss Emm® Augusta Mullen, 78, a writer, who has lived in Indianapolis sixty-five years, were held at 2:30 p. m. today at the home of her brother, William F. Mullen, 3271 Washington Blvd., where she died Friday, ljurlal waa at Crown Hill cemetery. Dr. Lewis Brown, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, officiated. Her brother i the only survivor.