Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 116, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1928 — Page 2

PAGE 2

100,080 WILL HEAR HOOVER IN TENNESSEE Special Trains Run From Other States for Only Address in South. BY PAUL R. MALLON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct . 4.—Prospects of 100,000 persons assembling in Elizabethton, Tenn., Saturday for the first and last Herbert Hoover campaign speech south of the Ma-son-Dixon line led to amplification of arrangements today at personal headquarters of the Republican presidential nominee. The journey upon which the nominee will embark from here Friday night will mark the first invasion of the South by a Republican presidential candidate in modern political history. In honor of the occasion, special trains are to be run from surrounding southern states and 2,000 acres has been set aside beyond the city limits to accommodate motorists, who are expected from Kentucky, North Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee. Five hundred police have been drafted to direct traffic. The speakers’ stand is being erected in the open at the foot of a high mountain and a pageant will be held there before Hoover speaks. The pageant will commemorate the assembling of mountain farmers for the battle of King’s Mountain in the Revolutionary war. King’s Mountain is only 40 miles away. The meeting will have an industrial significance also as a silk mill which ultimately will employ 25,000 persons- is to be dedicated. - Late in the day Hoover will journey ten miles to the soldier's home at Johnson City, where he will make a second important speech, before boarding his train at 7:15 p. m., for the return trip to Washington. BERDEL RITES ARE SET Funeral Will Be Held Friday Afternoon at Residence. Funeral services for Louis J. Berdel, 60, who committed suicide Wednesday by drowning in a gravel pit, will be held at 2 p. m. Friday at his home, 1864 Koehne St. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery, Surviving are the widow, a brother, Charles Berdell and five sisters, Mrs. Barbara Ebner, Mrs. Rose Claire and Mrs. Morton Gerlach, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Lela Hotz, of Carmel, and Mrs. Mollie Newby of Salem. LET SCHOOL CONTRACTS School commissioners met at new Shortridge High School. ThirtyFourth and Meridian Sts., today to award contracts for equipment. Officials plan to move from the old Shortridge building to the new school Thanksgiving. Several contracts for the school were awarded Wednesday: Lighting fixtures, Foster, Glore & Glass, Inc., $12,500; grading and beautification of grounds, Schwartz Brothers, $23,780; shades, Luther O. Draper Shade Company, $2,674; auditorium seats, Steel Furniture

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Famed Chief of Pawnees, Hero of Many Indian Battles, Dies

Bitterness Toward Whites Is Softened in Last Days; Friend of Curtis. Bn United Press PAWNEE, Okla., Oct. 4.—Ruling His Son. militant chief of the Pawnee Indians and reputed patriarch of Oklahoma Indians, died of old age here Wednesday, in his 102d year. The aged chief, never reconciled to the white man’s invasion and still bitter over clashes with the Sioux in the battle of Massacre Canyon fifty-six years ago in Nebraska, died in his sleep, Major Gordon (Pawnee Bill), Lillie told the United Press. News of his death was the signal for wailing and beating of tom toms by his brothers. Funeral rites for the chief will begin today with his burial and probably will last five days. Lillie, long a friend of the Indians, said. A week ago evidences of the aged warrior’s frailty was noted when he visited Tulsa to greet "Cousin Charlie’’ Curtis, Republican vice presidential candidate and member of the Kaw tribe. That journey was the Pawnee chief’s first trip off the reservation in twenty-live years. Promsied Vote to Curtis Still bearing antipathy against white domination over Indian lands, Ruling His Own boasted he never had voted, Lillie said, but he softened toward "Cousin Charlie” and declared he would cast his vote for his Kaw brother. The Pawnee chief became ill on his Tulsa trip, returned to seclucion of the reservation south of here and entered “the happy hunting grounds.” Ruling His Son was born in 1826 in Nebraska, then the home of the Pawnees, where they engaged in their last battle—the Battle of Massacre Canyon—against the Sioux in a clash over buffalo hunting grounds. In this skirmish a wife and son of the chief were slain, arousing animosity which he held to his deathbed. Bitter In Old Age In 1872 the proud Pawnees were forced to take the trail into Indian Territory, now Oklahoma. Here, still clinging to the vanishing customs of the old Indians, the chief grew into a bitter senility, surrounded by a few hundred of his tribesmen. He was a close friend of "Pawnee Bill” Lillie, now the "white chief of the Pawnees.” When the Sioux recently offered Lillie similar honor, Ruling His Son protested so vigorously that Lillie declined the designation. FOUND U. S. INSTITUTE Four City Persons Elected to Aid in Genealogy Work. Four Indianapolis persons have been elected founders of the Institute of American Genealogy, it was announced today. They are Mrs. E. H. Evans, 345 N. Pennsylvania St.; Mrs. Bernays Kennedy, 1030 N. Pennsylvania St.; William P. Herod, University Club, and F. B. Fowler, 4007 Washington Blvd. The instutite is being formed to affiliate genealogical, historical and patriotic-hereditary associations of the country and become a national clearing house for genealogical information. Forbids Marathon Dances Bn Times Special HAMMOND, ind., Oct. 4.—Marathon dances and roller skating endurance contests are things of the past in Hammond. An ordinance prohibiting both was passed Wednesday by the city council.

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Above is shown Chief Rules-His-Son, 104, who died yesterday, just a few days after greeting Senator Charles Curtis, vice presidential nominee, and assuring him that he would cast his vote'for him in November. With the chief at the reception for Curtis was Maj. Gordon W. Lillie, Pawnee Bill, one of his best friends. Lillie is pictured in the inset.

CHECK AIRPORT SITES Reappraisal of Approved Fields Is Rushed. Reappraisal of three tracts under consideration for a municipal airport site was being rushed today, preparatory to the citizens’ airport site committee luncheon Friday, when definite decision on the site is expected. Sites considered are Site, 30, seven miles west on the National Rd., north of Ben Davis; Site 8, immediately south of Ben Davis, and Site 30, an addition to Indianapolis airport, Mars Hill, the National Guard field. Appraisers for the work are Walter P. Johnson and Boyd Templeton. Mayor L. Ert Slack and Oren S. Hack, works board president, viewed the three remaining sites for the municipal airport Wednesday. DOGS BITEJ BOYS Lads Treated to Guard Against Rabies. Two boys were under treatment today for dog bites received Wednesday afternoon. The dog which bit Dennis Hilliard, 2, of 2507 Jackson St., was killed and the head taken to the State board of health laboratory to determine if it was suffering from rabies. The child was taken to city hospital. Billie Kinzie, 9. 728 N. Bancroft Ave., was treated at city hospital when bitten by a dog owned by Stanley Stewart, Capitol News Company, 9 N. New Jersey St. The dog is under observation. CHIEF OF COMMUNISTS ATTACKS BIG PARTY William Z. Foster, Workers Nominee, Is Speaker Here. William Z. Foster, presidential candidate of the Workers (Communist) Party, attacked the two major parties as being the agencies through which big business rules the workers at a meeting Wednesday night at the Denison attended by about seventy-five. William F. Jackman of Indianapolis, Workers party candidate for Governor, presided. URGES WAR ON DEVIL City Pastor Compares Satan to Roaring Lion. Declaring the devil has a large influence in the world today, the Rev. H. M. Pattison, pastor of Edgewood Methodist Episcopal Church, addressed the Young Men’s Bible Investigation class at their weekly supper in the Y. M. C. A. auditorium Wednesday night. Pattison compared the devil to a roaring lion looking for someone to devour and stressed the courage necessary to overcome the satanic “roaring lion.” Approximately eighty young men attended. SLACK WILL SPEAK First of Northside Christian Fall Fellowship Dinners Tonight. “A No Mean City” is the subject on which Mayor L. Ert Slack will speak to the first meeting of the fall series of Northwood Christian Church fellowship dinners to be held at the church parlors tonight. A program of special music for the ‘opening meeting has been arranged by Jesse White. Man Killed on Crossing 8.1/ Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 4.—John Doughty, 55, a farmer, was killed instantly when the auto he was driving was struck by a Muncie-Ft Wayne interurban car on a crossing at the north limits of this city Wednesday night.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police stolen: M. A. Johnston, 2128 N. Pennsylvania St., Essex coach, from in front of the Spink Arms. Frank Herndon. 1110 E. Washington St., Dodge coupe, 281291 from Market and Delaware Sts. Sam Lynees, 115 E. Fall Creek Blvd., Ford coupe, 615-623, from Delaware and Washington Sts. E. J. Moore, Pendleton, Ind., Ford touring, 616-850 from Georgia and Meridian Sts. Herman Rusler, 3836 E. Washington St„ Hupmobile touring, 658-112 from Senate Ave. and Washington St. FIGHT 2-STATE SPAN Hoosier Motor Club Opposes Pact With Kentucky. Directors of the Hoosiei Motor Club at their annual election meeting Wednesday went on record as opposed to the construction of the $4,000,000 bridge across the Ohio River at Evansville under the terms of the contract between Indiana and Kentucky. A suit to enjoin the State highway commission from carrying out the contract was filed in Superior Court, Sept. 28, by a majority of the club directors and four Evansville citizens. Under the contract, Indiana would bear $2,000,000 expense in the construction, while Kentucky would be repaid its half share by the collections of tolls. Duane Dungan, president of the club, points out that the bridge construction would take $2,000,000 from Indiana’s road building fund, and that very little road construction would be accomplished in the next two years, if the contract goes through. HOLD PARISH MEETING Episcopal Church of the Advent to Hold Session Tonight. Parishioners of the Episcopal Church of the Advent will dine at 6:30 tonight in the Prather Masonic Hall, Forty-Second St. and College Ave. George C. Benham of Cleveland, Ohio, director of the northern diocese of Ohio, will speak. The Rev. George S. Southworth, rector, will outline plans for the year. Dinner will be served.

Good-Bye Corn! Lifts Right Off—No Pain Doesn’t hurt one bit. Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn lj |i between the toes, and the foot callouses, with- JOjout soreness or irri- vrAljt tation.

SMITH TO SEE MORE OF FOLKS ON FINAL TOUR Brown Derby to Figure More Than Ever in Campaign Windup. BY THOMAS L. STOKES United Press Staff Correspondent ALBANY, N. Y„ Oct. 4.— Governor Alfred E. Smith’s next two campaign trips will be more “brown derby” affairs than his western trip. He will wear only one derby at a time, but he will appear in it more often. The Democratic candidate is arranging his schedule so that he will have more time to mix with the people on his forthcoming tour of the border States and the Middle West. Smith will leave here next Sunday night or Monday for New York and there will board the campaign train, which now is in New York for overhauling. He probably will strike directly South, with a speech first in North Carolina or Tennessee, most likely the latter, regarded as “doubtful.” Itinerary Mapped He is then expected to go to Kentucky, for a speech, probably in Louisville, then to Sedalia, Mo., and north to Chicago and Cleveland. The program has not been worked out definitely. It will be announced within a day or two. The last week of the campaign will be in the East. Smith will rest here at the mansion until he leaves for New York, but will strike at his Republican opponents from his retreat when the occasion offers, as he did when he criticised Herbert Hoover’s farm relief plan Wednesday. He said Hoover had no plan in commenting upon the indorsement of the Republican candidate and his farm relief program by B. F. Yoakum, a Democrat and formerly Interested in western railroads. Yoakum, now president of the Empire Bond and Mortgage Corporation of New York City, evolved a farm relief plan that was presented to Congress. Attacks Tariff Link Hoover, Smith said, says the tariff is the foundation of farm relief adding, “Every student of the subject and every farm leader takes a directly opposite view.” Shortly after Smith had criticised the Hoover program, he was attacked in turn by State Senator John Knight, Republican, president pro tern, of the Senate, who said Smith as Governor had shown little sympathy with the farmer in this State and never had offered any beneficial measure to aid them. Stresses Liquor Issue BY GORDON K. SHEARER United Press Staff Correspondent MUSKOGEE, Okla., Oct. 4.—Mrs. Mabel Willebrandt’s words were turned against the Republican party by Senator Joseph T. Robinson, Democratic nominee for vice presj ident, in his third Oklahoma ad- ; dress here Wednesday night. “ ‘No one knows what prohibition 1 is.’ ” Senator Robinson quoted Mrs. Willebrandt as saying, “ ‘because up to the present it has not had a fair chance. The Government started out trying to enforce it through a lot of fanatics. Since then there have been very feeble attempts. Some of them were so crooked as to be a burning disgrace.' “Who can command more scathing language?” Senator Robinson asked. “It is directed principally against the Harding and Coolidge administrations. You can not imagine worse conditions than those which prevail in great Republican centers like Chicago and Philadelphia with respect to violation of the prohibition laws.”

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FIGHT SCHEDULED ON SCHOOL BUDGET

“Why attack the school city budget when it is the only Marion County budget not requiring an increased levy?” Business Director Albert F. Walsman asked today, commenting on plans for the school budget hearing Friday before the State tax board. Walsman has spent several days preparing to meet reduction suggestions of the Chamber of Commerce at the hearing. ‘‘Of seventeen of the largest cities in Indiana, the Indianapolis levy for school purposes, exclusive of library and kindergarten, is fourth from the bottom,” he said. “Library and kindergarten figures were excluded from all cities in the list because few cities include these in their school levy, as Indianapolis does. “Exclusive of library and kindergarten, the school levy is only 96.1 cents. Other cities with higher;

DISABLED SHIP HEADSTO PORT Freighter Under Own Power —Trawler Sinks. B;i United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—The Dutch freighter Celaeno was proceeding to port without assistance today after sending an S. O. S. Wednesday. Immediately after receiving the S. O. S. the Hamburg-American liner Alber Ballin reported that it had gone to the aid of the Celaeno. No further word has been received from either ship, other than the radio message which the Radio Corporation of America got from the Celaeno. That message said the vessel was steaming in “without assistance.” The fishing trawler Fillet, developed a leak Wednesday off Montauk while on her way to George’s Bank off Newfoundland. The crew of 27 was saved by the coast guard destroyer, Terry just before the Fillet sank.

ELECTION COMMITTEE OF THEATER GROUP NAMED Kiwanis Club Director Is Speaker at Meeting. Elmer A. Steffen, director of the Kiwanis Clubs, spoke brieflly on the Little Theatre Society at the j Kiwanis Wednesday noon luncheon | at the Claypool in the absence of - Montaville Flowers, Pasadena, Cal., who was scheduled to speak. Flowers refused to speak on anything but partisian politics, and the date was cancelled. L., H. Dirks and Milton Brown invited local Kiwanians to attend an inter-club dinner at Greencastle, Ind., Wednesday. Both men are Kiwanians from Greencastle. Two nominating committees and one election committee were appointed by Julian Wetzel, presi- | dent, for the annual meeting and election to be held Wednesday night. Dec. 5. Election: Ernest L. Barr, chairman; A. W. Antrim. Robert F. Daggett, E C. Strathmann and C. P. Emmelmann. Nominating committees: O. T. Owen, chairman: A. P. Conklin. J. D. Marls and F. A. Dunlop. W. H Trimble, chairman; DeW:tt W. Brown, Dr. Lawrence S. Fall, George Jackson and H. M. Gay. Woman Stock Exchange Official Bu United Press NEW YORK. Oet. 4.—The New York Stock Exchange will have a woman official for the first time in its history. Mrs. Katherine M. Healy of Montclair, N. J., has been appointed purchasing agent for the exchange. Approximately $250,000 will be handled by her each year.

levies, ranging as high as $1.47. are Logansport, Gary. Hammond, Richmond, Marion, Elkhart, East Chicago, Terre Haute, New Albany, Anderson, Evansville, Lafayette, South Bend, Muncie, Ft. Wayne and Kokomo are lower.” Walsman said he will attempt to refute the Chamber of Commerce's charge that new Shortridge High School cost proportionately more than new Butler University buildings. He will show, he said, that the new Shortridge cost only 30 cents a cubic foot for construction, and Jordan Memorial hall at Butler University cost 45.5 cents, the latter figure furnished by the architect, Robert Frost toaggett. In a report prepared by William H. Book, Chamber civic affairs director, a 5-cent reduction in the $1.03 proposed school levy was suggested.

DEBATE INTEREST KEEN 25 Per Cent of Seats for DarrowRabbi Dispute to Visitors Widespread interest In the Clarence Darrow-Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht debate on the mechanistic theory in Cadle Tabernacle Oct. 17, is being shown. To date about 25 per cent of the requests for seat reservations at the battle of wits have come from outState Indiana points. Darrow will support the theory man is a machine, while Rabbi Feuderlicht will attack the theory. Reservations are being handled at the Claypool drug store. JUDGE CHOICE PENDS Governor Jackson is expected soon to appoint a successor to the late Appellate Judge Ethan A. Dausman. Judge Charles F. Remy, Appellate Court chief justice, Ihas asked the Governor to act at once as the court desires to catch up with its heavily-loaded calendar. Noel Eal, Noblesville, Republican candidate to succeed Dausman, has been offered the appointment and refused, it is understood. The judge appointed will serve until Jan. 1.

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,CCT. 4, 1925

BRANDS G. 0. P. DISEASED WITH BRIBERY, GRAFT Veteran Republican Rises in Democratic Rally to Denounce Own Party. The Republican revolt against continued rule “by the Statehousc gang” had a spokesman at the Democratic rally at South Side Turner’s Hall Wednesday night in the person of J. F. Haines, 5234 College Ave., retired educator and lifelong Republican. Rising from his seat in the audience, Haines voiced Republican disgust with “the same old gang that has betrayed their trust and brought reproach to the good name of Indiana,” and called upon Republicans to join with Democrats in electing Frank C. Dailey, the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, “to restore the State’s good name.” Haines is a graduate of Valparaiso and Indiana Universities. He has been a teacher and school superintendent forty years, and never was a candidate for political office. “The Republican party has a complication of diseases,” he said, “bribery, corruption In office, dishonesty in officials, bartering and bargaining with evil forces, signing on the dotted line, hypocrisy In leadership and the statute of limitations!” Relating the cordial relations between Governor Ed Jackson and Harry G. Leslie, Dailey’s opponent, Haines said: "Have you heard a word of denunciation of past misconduct by the Republican candidate for Governor? Not one. He is pleased with Ed and Ed says that Harry is the man to carry on.” Haines said he is one of 60,000 Republicans in Indiana, who voted in the primary for Thomas H. Adams in his crusade against the “corrupt system.” Adams, he said, has run up the white flag, but the 66,000 who supported him “have the right and privilege to continue the clean-up crusade in November by voting for a man whose past record is a guo rantee that he will not surrender, Frank C. Dailey.”