Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1928 — Page 2

PAGE 2

SMITH IN MINNESOTA TO VOICE APPEAL FOR BALLOTS

NORTHWEST IS VEERING TO AL, BACKERS SAY Democratic Nominee Will Speak on Waterways in St. Paul Tonight. HOPES TO WIN DAKOTA Strong Evidence of Swing From G. 0. P. Seen in Trip Across State.

BY THOMAS L. STOKES United Press Staff Correspondent MINNEAPOLIS. Sept, 27.—Governor Alfred E. Smith brought his brown derby campaign to the Twin Cities today and they shared in giving him a welcome. The Democratic candidate's train arrived here at 9:30 a. m. and was met oy another of the large crowds which have greeted him since he left Albany on his Western campaign tour. Minneapolis will see the New York Governor on parade this afternoon and then he will go to St. Paul for dinner and his only Minnesota speech. The Democratic candidate announced he would speak in St. Paul on inland waterways and the 6t. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway project, a vital issue in the whole Central West. Will Canvass Situation After luncheon, Smith went into conference with State Democratic leaders to canvass the situation. He has received reports that unusual sentiment for him has manifested itself in Minnesota. The State never has gone Democratic in a preside:':ial election. Rccsevelt carried it in the 1912 split, tnd Wilson lost it by a very slight largin in 1916. The State ohas twelve electoral votes. The New York Governor came out of the Northwest today with assurances from State leaders that the State he rode through all day yesterday. North Dakota, will give him its five electoral votes. Additional encouragement came In the expressions of favor toward the Democratic presidential candidate by Governor Walter Maddock, I who was regarded as giving Smith a tacit indorsement. Maddock welcomed the Governor at his State capital office in Bismarck and joined the campaign train for the trip to Jamestown, along with the entire executive committee of the State committee. . Governor for Smith Maddock, elected Lieutenant Governor as a Republican on the ticket with the late Governor Sprite. became Governor upon the death of the latter a few weeks ago. He is running for re-election as a Democrat. Maddock said later that his support of' Smith is as representative of the farm interests and on that policy, he has the indorsement as candidate for Governor of the Democratic organizations and the NonPartisan League, the latter having refused indorsement of Herbert Hoover. Maddock’s political vagaries are Indicative of the political cross currents in North Dakota. Smith feund the situation confusing, with Democrats, Republicans and Nonpartisan Leaguers split over both State and national tickets. This Signifies an independence in voting, japon which Democrats are counting. Count on Wet Support Democrats are counting also upon gupport of the "wets.” Their Strength is shown in the huge vote polled in June for repeal of the dry clause in the Constitution, which Was defeated, 103,000 to 96,000, on Ifche other hand the religious issue is p, factor in North Dakota. The special train stopped at Bisftiark for a‘n hour, and Governor fc’mith rode up to the State capitol, under a banner across Main St. which read: "Hello, Al, North Dakota is for you.” There he visited the Dakota Governor in his unimposing office on the second floor of the small wooden Capitol building.

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Co-eds, 110 of Them, to Be Clerks for Two Days

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BIBLE CLUB MEETS God Only Protection for Nation, Says Pastor. "No nation can get armies or navies enough to insure its protection if it forgets its God,” declared the Rev. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, to 100 members of the Bible Investigation Club at the Y. M. C. A. Wednesday night. The Rev. Mr. Dunkel’s talk was the third of a series offered to the weekly young men’s gatherings by local ministers under the general topic of "Animals of the Bible.” The talk Wednesday night dealt with the association of jackals and destruction, as evidenced in biblical history. Donald Typer, Y. M. C. A. secretary from Anderson, Ind., announced the second annual young mens’ conference Oct. 5-8 at Anderson.

MISSION GROUP ELECTS; Mrs. Ewing Shields Named President of M. E. District Society. Mrs. Ewing Shields was elected president of the Indianapolis district of the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society at the annual meeting Wednesday at Capitol Avenue M. E. Church. Vice presidents elected were Mrs. Orien W. Fifer, Mrs. Eleanor Anderson, Mrs. S. C. Young, Mrs. Sidney Hatfield and Mrs. C. H. Sedan. A pledge for $25,000 for foreign missionary work was made at the business session held during the afternoon. The money will be raise ! from the forty-five Methodist foreign missionary societies in the Indianapolis district. An address by Mrs. A. P. Camphor, wife of the bishop of Liberia, and memorial services for Jennie M, Tinsley Waugh, first foreign missionary from the Meridian Methodist Chufrch, completed the program. HONOR CLEVELAND MAN New Head of Rabbi Neustadt Talmud Torah Is Guest at Fete. Mayer Gallin, of Cleveland, who has been appointed superintendent of the Rabbi Neustadt Talmud Torah, and his predecessor, Solomon Kasdan were honored Wednesday night with a dinner at the Kirschbaum Community center. More than 400 were present. Speakers were Rabbis Morris M. Feuerlicht, S. A. Katz, Milton Steinberg and Solomon Mizrachi. Musical numbers were offerd by Cantor Myro Glass, of the Beth-El Zedek temple. Isaac Marks, president of the education association, was chairman. STREET CAR HITS AUTO Woman Driver Injured in Crash; Bicyclist Is Hurt When her automobile was struck by a street car at Shelby and Nelson Sts. Wednesday night, Mrs. Nettie Welch, 2535 Shelby St., was cut and bruised severely. The tram was opened by Milton Smith, 33 Warman St., motorman. Belso Bishop, 37, of 917 W. Twenty Ninth St., received a cut over the right eye Wednesday night when he was knocked from his bicycle at Twenty-Fourth St . and Central Ave., by a motor car driven by L. O. Hall, 2821 Ruckle St. KIWANIS HEAR PRINCIPAL Arsenal Tech,Head Speaks at Club Luncheon. The effect of prohibition in the United States on business is being studied by Europeans, according to Milo H. Stuart, principal of Arsenal Technical High School, who gave an account of his recent 6,000-mile tour of ten European countries as a feature of the weekly Kiwanis Club luncheon at the Claypool Wednesday. Bicycles challenge the supremacy of the automobile in Europe, said Stuart. Miss Wilma Leonard, a student at Arsenal Technical sang. She was accompanied by Mrs. J. Russell Paxton, instructor in music. f G. 0. P. CLUB TO MEET Dr- Harry E. Barnard Will Address Women’s Group Tuesday. Dr. Harry E. Barnard, former food and drug commissioner of Indiana, personal friend of Herbert C. Hoover, Republican presidential nominee, will be the principal speaker at a dinner meeting of the Statehouse Women's Republican Club at the Columbia Club Tuesday evening, Oct. 2. Republican State candidates and their wives will be guests. Mrs | Grace Urbahns, State treasurer and club president, will preside.

These 110 Indiana Central College co-eds will earn additional pocket money and get practical experience in the business world Saturday and Monday. They are to work as clerks at the William 11. Block Company department store those days. The college employment department, which finds opportunities for many of the girls to earn part of their college expenses, arranged the matter.

44 TO FACE JUDGE Phayer and Wright Will Be Arraigned Monday. Charles Phayer, 32, and Homer Wright, 27, will be among the fortyfour who will be arraigned Monday before Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Wright faces possible life imprisonment on an habitual criminal charge, while Phayer, recently was brought here from St. Louis for alleged conspiracy in the SIOO,OOO gem holdup at the Broadmoor Country Club, May 30. Those who pleaded guilty at the arraignment wiil be sentenced and trial dates will be set for those who plead not guilty. James Walker, arrested with Wright, will face a charge of being an ex-convict with a pistol in his possession. Four men will be arraigned on murder charges. They are Joe Outlaw, Philip Smith, Frank James and Leroy Mass. In, addition to Wright, William Ollis and Roy Sharrer face habitual criminal charges. MAP FOREMEN TRAINING Metal Trades Association to Open Course Here Oct. 15. “Good Foremanship, Industry’s Asset,” will be subject of George Seyler, official of the Lukenheimer Company, Cincinnati, at the Foremen’s Club of Indianapolis dinner at the Chamber of Commerce Friday at 6:30 p. m. Seyler is a member of the National Metal Trades Association industrial education committee, which will begin “foremen conference leader training courses” here Oct. 15. An industrial film, “The Jewels of Industry,” will be shown through courtesy of the Carborundum Company of Niagara Falls. Plans for the annual convention of the national Association of Foremen here next May also will be announced.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Blind Baggage NEW YORK, Sept. 27.—Mary Josephine “Polly” Lauder, Gene Tunney's fiancee, took a strange man’s evening attire abroad with her when she sailed Friday on the Satumia. The clothes were in a suitcase which was included mysteriously in her luggage.

WITNESS IS SOUGHT Seek Friend of Auto Victim to Hear Story. Deputy sheriffs and police sought Joe Ober, of Cincinnati, today to learn details of an accident west of the city late Tuesday night in which Frank Hogan, 40, of Shreveport, La., was critically injured. Ober is said to have appeared at the Methodist Hospital, where Hogan was taken and said he was walking with Hogan when he was struck. After learning that Hogan was still unconscious he left and police have no version of how Hogan was struck or who struck him. When he swerved his truck to avoid striking an automobile at South and Delaware Sts., Tuesday, A. V. Cummings, 1242 N. Pershing Ave., hit a stret car. He was cut on the hands and face. Kelso Bishop, 917 W. TwentyNinth St., was slightly injured when his bicycle collided with an automobile driven by L. O. Hall, 2821 Ruckle St., at Twenty-Fourth St. and Central Ave., late Tuesday. 'ELEPHANTS’ TO MEET Marion County Elephants, G. O. P. organization, will hold their next meeting at the Athenaeum, Harry Tutewiler, announced today. The next meeting was planned for Oct. 11, but the date may be changed because of the conflict with the local speech by Senator Charles Curtis.

HELD IN DRY RAID Third Arrest Made Following Seizure of Auto. The third arrest in connection with the seizure early Wednesday of an automobile load of Canadian ! beer and whisky in a garage at 2446 i W. Sixteenth St., was made Wednesday night when Joe Drake, 45, 2154 Station St., was taken into custody. Drake was arrested in a raid on a pool room at 2236 W. Sixteenth St., whose proprietor, David Dugger, also is under arrest in connection with the Canadian liquor haul. The other man in custody is Vinard Drake, 30, 2655 N. Harding St. Five gallons of whisky were found in the rear of the pool room by police. Police and Department of Justice operatives are working on the theory the trio under arrest may be connected with the interstate auto theft ring under investigation by the Federal Grand jury. The automobile in which the contraband liquor was found, a Cadillac, was traced by police as having been stolen from St. Paul. AUTO STICKERS SCORED Ads for Hoover or Al Equally Hinder Driving. Who do you like, Hoover or Smith? Take your pick, but don’t make your motor cars rolling advertisements for either. Thus does Duane Dungan, president of the Hoosier Motor Club, sum up the presidential political situation. Windshield and rear window stickers on automobiles, even though Al or Herb smile broadly from their photographs at the observer, make careful driving almost impossible, says Dungan. SHRINE CLUB INSTALLS Newly elected officers of the Shrine Caravan noon luncheon club were installed today at the Murat Temple. Officers are: Dr. Clifford E. Cox, president; Judge Thomas S. Garvirt, vice president; Homer L. Cook, secretary; Arthur S. Klmber. treasurer, and Ike Riley, sergeant-at-arms.

LAUNCH MOVE TO PUT LESION INTO POLITICS Convention in San Antonio Oct. 3-12 Will Vote on Amendment. Itn JVK.I Srrrirr SAN ANTONIO. Tex., Sept. 27. The American Legion, which has been strictly a non-partisan organization, as far as politics is concerned, ever since it was founded, soon may cut loose from its old restrictions and enter the political arena whenever it s'ees fit. That possibility arises from the fact that certain legion members are now preparing an amendment to the organization’s constitution which they will introduce at the legion convention here Oct. 8 to 12. The amendment, it is understood, would strike out the last sentence of article two, section two, of the constitution. That section now reads: Expect Bitter Fight "The American Legion shall be absolutely non-political and shall not be used for the dissemination of partisan principles, nor for the promotion of the candidacy of an;.’ person seeking public office or preferment. “No candidate for. or incumbent of, any salaried elective public office shall hold any office in the American Legion or in any department or post thereof.” Asa result, it is expected that a bitter fight will mark debate over the projected amendment. The 1928 coming convention will be a notable one. The legion has built itself up from the dark days of 1924, when its membership list slumped badly,’ until it now has nearly a million members—as many as it ever had. Rodeo on Program These members will be represented at the convention here by thousands of delegates and their wives and families An elaborate entertainment program has been planned. Heading the list is a great rodeo, promoted by W. T. Johnson, rich San Antonio cattleman. Prizes totaling $25,000 have been offered, and the best cowboys of the West have entered. Other items on the program include a prize fight, battle exercises, a great air circus in which some of America’s most famous fliers will perform, a Broadway show, a Mexican revue, Spanish fiestas and trips to the cities along the Mexican border. Then, of course, there will be that pre-eminent feature of all legion conventions—the big parade. This wiil come on the second day. The procession will climax its march by swinging past the historic Alamo, shrine of patriotism for scores of years. In front of the Alamo will be the reviewing stand, occupied by National Commander Edward E. Spafford and distinguished guests. Sessions of the convention will

Ayres' September O. M# Friday % END -OF-MONTH SALE at Ayres' means the marking off of profit and ofttimes even more. It means that this regular monthly clearing of stocks gives you seasonable merchandise at bargain prices, while these goods are still in season. We must take these losses to keep our stocks fresh. The gain is yours.

Re-Elected

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Mrs. Eva Davidson, re-elected president cf the Marion County W. C. T. U. at the county convention at Broadway Methodist Church. be held in San Antonio’s $2,000,000 municipal auditorium, said to be the finest structure of its kind in the South. Tomato Like Horned Toad DOWNEYVILLE, Ind., Sept. 27. The horned toad is not confined to animal life, at least in appearance, it is proved by William Scudder, of near here. He has on exhibtion a freak tomato which has all the marks of the horned toad.

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SEPT. 27, 1928

CHARGE GARAGE' FIRED F0R56.500 Trucker Accused of Plot to Collect Insurance. Wanton destruction of $15,000 worth of household goods of seven families entrusted to his care was qne of the charges which the State today undertook to prove in CnnfN nal Court against Clarence Armstrong. 811 N. Dearborn St., operator of the P. and A. Despatch, an interstate trucking concern. The household goods were stored in Armstrong’s frame garage, 1329 De Loss St., when it burned more than a year ago. The State charges that Armstrong set fire to the place to collect $3,000 Insurance on the building and $3,500 on two trucks owned by his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Armstrong. State witnesses declare Armstrong told them he had a modern, fireproof warehouse, but found their belongings in ruins when the burned. At least one family was withoTW insurance, having been told by Armstrong that his insurance covered its goods. Attorneys expected to complete the jury and start testimony this afternoon. The case will last several days, the State having sixteen witnesses and the defense asserting it will use forty. Special Judge Frank Symmes is presiding. Would you like to place your piano in a private home where it would receive the best of care? If so. turn to the Miscellaneous Wanted Classification of tonight’s want ads.