Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 155, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1928 — Page 9

Second Section

STORM KlliS 85; PROPERTY LOSSISHIIGE Western Europe Is Lashed by Most Furious Gale in 50 Years. SOUND NEW WARNINGS Trail of Death Is Blazed Through Great Britain and France. By United Press London, Nov. 19.—At least eightyfive and possibly more than 100 persons have been killed in the furious storm that has swept the British isles and western Europe since last Thursday, according to the latest figures available today. Hundreds have been injured and damaged running into the millions Was suffered. The storm was described by meteorologists as one of the worst general storms in history and a warning was broadcast that a renewal of the heavy gales and rains were imminent over the British Isles and English channel. French Coast Lashed By United Press PARIS, Nov. 19.—The aftermath of the storm which has spread a trail of death and destruction in England and Europe for the last four days lashed the French coast Sunday. It seemed certain that the death toll would reach 100. High gales drove damaged shipping into Cherbourg harbor and vessels which normally would make eighteen knots an hour were able to make only five. The death list grew as reports continued to pour in today. England had twenty-five deaths, with the possibility of sixteen more in the missing crews of the steamer Eltham and schooner Mary Ann, wrecked Saturday. Lifeboats had succeeded in rescuing only one person from the Mary Ann. It was thought impossible that the others could be alive. France had twelve deaths, twelve lost their lives off the Holland coast and many others were reported from isolated towns. A dispatch from Amsterdam told of a small sailing vessel caught in the storm and wrecked off Terschelling island, drowning the captain, his wife and ten children. Captains of vessels arriving af Dutch ports described the terrific seas encountered in the gale. Official reports from London said the storm was the most severe in fifty years of weather bureau history. From the Isere valley, in France, came word that this section was flooded anew, its rivers overflowing and doing extensive damage, runin? into the millions, as parts of Avignon and Grenoble became inundated. BUSINESS MEN INVITED TO FORM BOOSTER CLUB Meeting to Be Held Tonight at Banner Furniture Company. More than 200 young business men of Indianapolis have been invited to a meeting at 8 tons*t at the Banner Furniture to form a permanent organization to boast Indianapolis. The plan for the organization was suggested by B. E. Whitehill, Banner Furniture Company manager. Whitehill and L. L. Dickerson, city librarian, will outline the need of the organization from WFBM radio studio, those at the meeting tuning in on the speeches. Others who will speak will include: Superior Judge Byron K. Elliott, James Perry, owner of the Indianapolis baseball team, and Jack Hendricks Jr. Others who are sponsoring the organization are Bon Aspy, Horace Huey, Perry Lesh, Thomas F. Hatfield, John Darmody Jr., Wallace O. Lee and Barrett Woodsmall. V. S. Consulate Ransacked By United Press ZAGREB, Jugo-Savia, Nov. 19. Unidentified persons entered the United States consulate here during the night and ransacked documents. Money in the consul’s desk was untouched. It was believed the intruders sought passport stamps. Plays Minister Role Emmett King is playing the role of the minister in “The Shopworn Angel,’’ the next co-featuring vehicle for Nancy Carroll and Gary Cooper which is being directed at the Paramount studios in Hollywood by Richard Wallace.

Shrewd Buyers Know that the big Automobile bargains are found among used cars—the thousands who must economize are learning the Golden Secret of Used Car buying. Many a “Used Car” is simply one that has been driven just long enough to break it into good running condition, then, because of a whim for a newer model, or a different make, it is sold or traded in. You have today, the unusual opportunity of buying a good car at a price way below market value. Dealers are co-operating a Great City wide Fall Clearance Sale. Turn to Pages 14 and 15 of today’s Times and shop thru the many special offerings.

Entered As Secor .-Class Matle: at Postoffice. Indianapolis

Uplift Craze Hits Kennels; Now Dogs Will Go to College

BY HORTEN3E SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—“ Going to the dogs’’ may have a different meaning if the canines of the country take to the uplift and higher education that is being plained for them. Leading the dogs to their golden age is Fellow, that superbly beautiful gentleman and scholar of the dog world who is helping to raise a Fellow fund. This will be used in establishing research laboratories in which the dog’s life may be studied by competent animal psychologists. Professor C. J. Warden, director of the animal laboratory at Columbia university is chairman of the Fellow fund committee, and Dr. J. B. Watson, famed behavorist psychologist, is treasurer. Fellow is the recognized leader of the dog intellegentsia—probably the mental giant of his race. Only 6 years old, he has been going to Columbia university for two years, has been examined by psychologists, and pronounced the wonder animal of the world. In no sense a trick dog or a stunt perforn. Fellow is a deep thinker. It is declared that he can think, concentrate and obey im-

Famed Dancer to Show You How to Win Grace

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GRACEFUL? Yes, and pretty, too, is Doris Niles, the youngest dancer in America to head her own organization. She began to study dancing at the age of 8 and made her professional debut at 13. Since then she has apepared in several American tours, as well as in France and Spain. Three times last summer she danced by royal command before King Alfonso, Queen Victoria and the Spanish court. Miss Niles now has written, for The Times and NEA Service, a series of artiles called “The Way to Grow Graceful.” The series deals with grace and charm in every day life which every woman wants and which, this celebrated dancer says, the American woman possesses to a great extent. Every installment is strikingly illustrated with specially posed photographs. Watch for them, beginning Tuesday in The Times.

SCHOOLS TO FIGHT BUS ROUTE CHANGE

Hearing on Meridian Line Petition Scheduled for This Afternoon. Heads of five schools along North Meridian street are among remonstrators against the Indianapolis Street railway’s petition to route a new Fairview bus line from the Circle to Thirty-sixth street on Meridian. Butler university students and faculty members were to argue advantages of the proposal with protesting property owners before thp park board in city council chamber this afternoon. * The remonstrance filed against the petition points out that Meridian street already is overcrowded with traffic; motor busses would ruin the new paving and destroy attractiveness of the street; and lives of school children would be endangered. Heading the list of remonstrators are the heads of five schools along Meridian street or adjacent to it: Sister Hildegrade, Mother Superior, St r Agnes academy. Brother William. head of Cathedral high school; Charles M. Miller, superintendent Indianapolis public schools; Nell Farrar, superintendent of Tudor hall, and Mary S. Ray, principal School 60. Others who signed the remonstrance include: Mrs. G. R. Wysongr, Mrs. 8. C. Parry. Mrs. Niles Chapman, Mrs. William J. Shafer, Cora M. Day, Mrs. Albert Gale, Fred R. Gale, A. M. Glossbrenner. Mrs. Frederick Holliday. Mary Jameson Judah, J. M. Judah, M. C. Levey, tyfarjorie Brown Sherwood. Edna Vajeen, Mr. and Mrs. John Ruckelthaus, Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Spaan. Margaret H. Blish, G. A. Schnull, Gertrudee S. Rauch, John G.

METEOR SHOWER FORECASTS NIGHT OF FIRE FOR WORLD IN FIVE YEARS

BY HILLIER KREIGBAUM United Press Staff Correspondent PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 19. Brilliant specks in the sky last week that marked the earth’s passage through the path of the Leonid meteors, indicate that the earth probably will witness a “night of fire” in 1932 or 1933, Professor Charles P. Olivier said today. Professor Olivier observed the meteors to see if there was an increase over last year which would indicate that the Leonids were ap-

The Indianapolis Times

Rauch, David Munro, Robert H. Bryson, Cora W. Pierson, Mary E. Eymann. Charles F. Coffin, Mrs. Charles F. Coffin, Charles F. Plel, Helena Piel, Clara E. Rattl. Josephine Fox, H. H. WoodsmaU, Lafayette Court Company, Delaware Improvement Corporation, Mrs. James Cunning, Carl W. Plel, Mrs. C. P. Brant, Harry Miesol, Horace Kinney, Laura J. Kinney, Gertrude K. Rosenthal. A. M. Rosenthal. Mrs. James S. Cruse. James J. Cruse. Mrs. Grace A. Wood and Frank W. Wood. LECTURES ON INDIA Safety Depends on England, Says Lowell Thomas. A word picture of India overrun oy the hordes of Soviet Russia or by the savage Afghans if the British cease to guard Khyber Pass was painted by Lowell Thomas, globe trotter, in a lecture on “Forbidden Afghanistan,” at the Armory Sunday afternoon under the auspices of Orchard school. “India is not one race, but a hundred, and any lessening of the British rule would bring in the Afghans or the Russians, who look with longing eyes over the mountain ranges into British India,” said Thomas. ‘YES —ROOSEVELT WON’ By United Press NEW YORK. Nov. 19.—Albert Ottinger, attorney general, has conceded the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt, his Democratic opponent for Governor of New York. Ottinger refused to concede Roosevelt’s victor immediately after the election despite the 23,000 lead held by the Democratic candidate.

proaching a maximum within five years. He said that his observations had led him to believe that the night of Nov. 12, 1833, would be duplicated. On that night the sky was ablaze with meteors. Many thought the earth was coming to an end. More than 25,000 meteors were seen by a single observer in Europe. The professor is president of the American Meteor Society and a member of the University of

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, NOV. 19, 1928

plicity. The words he understands number almost 400 —only slightly less than the number used by the average human being in an average conversation. His coat, with the colors you find in a cross fox fur, is soft and gleaming, and the lines of his body are lithe ahd graceful. Fellow is a German shepherd dog, and was sired by a police dog descended from a long line of prize winners. He is the father of forty pups, but of them has anything like Fellow's mentality. Asa wage earner. Fellow is no slouch. He made SIO,OOO in three months last year giving demonstrations of his work.*Fellow is weighed every day and stays around 70 pounds. His temperature, taken daily, is about a degree lower than that of the average dog, due possibly to the tranquility of his life. He eats only the choicest of viands, with a preference for breast of veal. He lies out flat in his bed like a human, instead of curled up like a dog, and he suffers from nightmares—due, is is said, to his high mental tension.

PUPIL SLAIN, SCHOOL BOOZE QUiZORDERED Chicago Cleanup Started, to Halt Liquor Sales to Students. Bn United Press CHICAGO. Nov. 19.—Three investigations were launched today into the death oi William Adomaytis, 18-year-old student, shot to death Sunday by Anthony Juskus, proprietor of an ice cream parlor. The youth was killed in the refreshment parlor, which is said to be a liquor resort. Coroner Oscar Wolff will start his investigation into the killing today. He said he had been informed that merchants in the neighborhood nave been selling liquor to school children. William J. Bogan, superintendent of schools, opened an inquiry today by calling a conference with police officials to lay plans to put the lid on bootlegging in the vicinity of city schools. William R. Russel, commissioner of police, has ordered each police district to make a survey of the schools. Steps will be taken to close all places where juvenile delinquency is found, Russel said. Juskus Sunday admitted killing young Adomaytis. He said the youth, with several others, was playing cards in the back room of the ice cream parlor. Juskus said he played cards with the youths and won $6. “Then,’’ Juskus said, "I asked if they wanted a drink. They all ordered sodas. When I asked them to pay, Adomaytis threw a glass at me and tried to beat me. I got my gun and shot him. I had to do it if I wanted to save myself.” After the shooting Juskus tossed his revolver out of the rear door. When police arrived he denied the killing, but later admitted it. John Adomaytis, father of the slain boy, met Juskus at the police station and attempted to attack him. He was restrained by several policemen. MUNCIE MAN INJURED IN MICHIGAN BUS CRASH Seven Hurt in Collision When Priest’s Car Hits Truck. By United Press PAWPAW, Mich., Nov. 19.—One woman was near death today and six others were in a critical condition at a Kalamazoo hospital as the' result of a Chicago-to-Detroit bus, loaded with thirty-five passengers, colliding with an automobile driven by the Rev. Father Julian Bonna, Pawpaw. The bus, traveling at a high rate of speed, cut around an automobile and collided with a machine driven oy the priest. Mrs. Pearl Merrick of Augusta, Mich., suffered a fractured skull and may die. Included among others seriously injured were: Julian N. Tebbets, Madison, Wis.; Alva Johnson, Muncie, Ind.; Wilson Dodge, U. S. M. C. navy yards, Philadelphia. and Fatter Bonna. Warehouse Fire Loss S2OO Fire in the Talge Mahogany Company warehouse at Alvord street and Roosevelt avenue Sunday night did damage estimated at S2OO. It was caused by spontaneous combustion, firemen said.

SNAPSHOT IS ONLY GIRL DEATH CLEW

By United Press NORRISTOWN, Pa., Nov. 19. Torn bits of a snapshot offered the only clew today to the murder of an attractive girl, whose body was found yesterday in a cornfield three miles from here. One of the women in the group in the photograph was believed to be the victim. The girl, whose body was found almost on the spot where Mrs. Helen Zeracky’s body was discovered three weeks ago, apparently had been dragged to the corn-

Pennsylvania faculty at the Flower observatory at Upper Darby. a u DATA on the meteors collected all over the United States and Canada by meteor observers will be sent to the president of the society, who will tabulate it in an effort to give complete data to astronomers who will calculate the mathematics of the, 1932 or 1933 display. That will give scientists the exact data on which to predict ap-

Jackie Seasick By United Press DOVER, Eng., Nov. 19. Jackie Coogan, youthful film star, was seasick when he arrived here Sunday. He said there were three people he wanted to meet and shake hands with in England. They are the King and Queen and the Prince of Wales.

CURB URGED ON COURTS’JPOWER New Injunction Bill to Be Given Congress. By United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 19—Democrats and Republicans will be given a chance to make good when platform pledges against aDuse of federal courts’ power of injunction at the the next session of congress. A bill providing a curb on the use of injunctions to break strikes has beep drawn by a subcommittee of the senate judiciary committee. It is a substitute for the Shipstead bill, and will be submitted to the full committee at an early meeting. Many haerings were held on the Shipstead bill at the last session, but it was changed and amended to such extent that anew bill was thought desirable. Senator Norris, chairman of the committee and one of the authors of the new measure, is hopeful it will be enacted. The other members of the subcommittee are Senator Walsh oi Montana and Senator Blaine of Wisconsin. It is understood the subcommittee’s bill goes farther than the Shipstead measure did in throwing legal protection around the right of collective bargaining and financing a strike through contributions from fellow-workers. REFUSE TO PAY BILL Attorney to Refile Charge Against County. After two county election commissioners declared they would not pay Thomas C. Whallon, attorney and associate of George V. Coffin, district Republican chairman, SSOO for preparing a demurrer in the Jacob Morgan vote correction suit, which was never tried. Whallon withdrew’ his bill. He said today that he wanted “to itemize the request” and that he will refile it. Ira M. Holmes, chairman of the election board, approved the original bill, but Democratic Member James E. Deery and County Clerk George O. Hutsell, ex-officio member, stated they would not pay it. “If it had been SIOO, it would have been plenty,” objecting commissioners stated. FINES FOR TARDY COPS Must Appear In Court Cases On Time, Judge Order. Tardy policemen and detectives who do not appear on time in municipal and criminal court cases in which they are prosecuting witnesses will be fined, according to an edict sent the police department today by judges of the city courts and Judge James A. Cillins of criminal court. Hereafter all police witnesses must be on hand at either 9 a. m. or 2 p. m.

field, after being shot through the head. She was about 23 years old, 5 feet 3 inches tall, with brown eyes and dark, bobbed hair. She wore a dark blue sailor dress, a black, furtrimmed coat and black pumps and silk stockings. District-Attorney Rempinger said the body still was warm when detectives found it. He believed the girl was killed about 6 a. m. yesterday.

proximately how the earth will react to the meteors then. The meteors, which always appear in the middle of November, ride out of the constellation of J*o. They crash into the earth’s atmosphere at an estimated speed of forty-four miles a second, the professor said. Because of their speed, the meteors are “burned out” before they possibly could reach the earth, Professor Olivier explained. He said that once in a while they become fire-balls, meteors that reach within thirty to forty miles

/ . ‘

Jacob Herbert, upper left, and Fellow, his famous German shepherd. Lower right is Sambo, the “talking dog.”

PRISON PROBE MAY BARE ASTOUNDING STORY OF MISRULE

Favortism, Smuggling of Drugs, Parole Laxity Are Intimated. BY KENNETH WATSON Times Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—Testimony of a startling nature regarding paroling of federal prisoners, favoritism shown influential pri*oners and smuggling of drugs into federal penitentiaries is expected to be developed here next month when the special congressional prison inspection committee resumes its hearings. Representative John G. Cooper of Ohio, chairman, indicated this today on his arrival from Atlanta, where he and three other congressmen spent several days probing conditions. Previously the committee had inspected Leavenworth prison, and one of its members had visited McNeil Island prison on the Pacific ’coast. Cooper said enough material had been obtained to warrant subpoenaing of witnesses to be examined by the committee here. “All our hearings were in executive session and I can not discuss details until our report is submitted to the house in February,” Cooper said. The Ohio congressman did say, however, that the committee was amazed at the terrible conditions of overcrow'dnig in all government institutions. “For instance, at Atlanta we found 3.200 prisoners crowded into cells built to accommodate a maximum of 2,000,” Cooper said. One of the most important witnesses will be Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assistant United States attorney-general, who recently had department of justice agents probing alleged irregularities at Atlanta. SEEK SIX BANDITS $57 Taken in Four Holdups Over Week-End. Police today sought four sets of hold-up men who operated here over the week-end, two of whom were successful in their robbery attempts. The bandit who slugged Stanley Nossol, 1612 Wilcox street, Sunday night near Minkner and Michigan streets, overlooked S2OO in Nossol’s pocket. A deep scalp wound on Nossol’s head was dressed in a nearby doctor’s office. Two Negros who attacked Z. M. Montgomery, 1214 Yandes street, at Yandes and Twelfth streets, Sunday night, took S3O, a knife and keys. Fred Combs, 2960 Kenwood avenue, driving at Thirty-eighth street and Cold Springs road Saturday night, was forced to halt by two bandits who took $27.50. An armed bandit who threatened Mrs. Christina Valentine, 636 North Jefferson avenue, as she was walking near her home Saturday night, let her go when she told him she had no money in her purse. Discuss Fall Ceremonial Plans for a fall ceremonial to be held Saturday, were discussed today at a luncheon of the Ladies’ Oriental Shrine at the Lincoln.

of the earth and have the brillance of a pale moon on a clear summer night. The others are burned to nothing in the rare gases more than eighty miles above the earth’s surface. # "'■pHE Leonids have a brother and sister relationship with Tempel’s comet,” the professor explained. “They probably both had a common parent. They both have a circuit around the sun of thirtythree years.”

Second Section

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Dies for Penny NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—When Bernette Gemsback, 3, stooped to opick up a penny she had dropped in the street she was struck by a taxicab and killed. Her father is Hugo Gemsback, president of radio staton WRNY.

FROBE BURGLARIES Range From Gems to Coal. Robberies for Week-End Detectives today investigated week-end burglaries and robberies which ranged from a ‘s3oo jewelry theft to a missing half-ton of coal. The jewelry was taken from the Max Sacks pawn shop. 308 Indiana avenue. Loot consisted of fifty-two rings, a pair of diamond ear rings, a bracelet and four watches. Sacks believed the burglar hid in the store Saturday night and pried his way out the front door, Sunday. Thieves. * preparing for a hard winter, took the coal from a shed in the /ear of the home of Mrs. Bertha Barter, 724 East Vermont street. Other thefts were reported by: Joseph Entwistle, 3468 East Twenty-fifth street, wife’s purse containing $75 and SIOO diamond, taken from dresser in home: George Morris, 19 North Liberty street, slot machine and cigarets, from restaurant; Nate Segal grocery, 1333 North Senate avenue. $8 and large supply of cigarets: Burkett & Byers grocery, fifteen chickens, $18; M. C. Bivens, traveling bags and contents, value S2OO, from automobile parked downtown; William E. Coffman, 2047 Park avenue, S3O overcoat from car parked near Statehoilse. JOHN D. TO STAR-fPLAY Oil King Prepares for Season on Florida Links. By United Press POCANTICO HILLS, N. Y., Nov. 19.—John D. Rockefeller Sr. will begin his season of golf in Florida shortly after Thanksgiving, it was learned today. Rockefeller will come to his country home here Wednesday from Lakewood, N. J., with a retinue of servants occupying two limousines. His family and a few friends will dine with him Thanksgiving day and he will leave for Ormond Beach soon afterward. SEEKS TAX FOR~ BANDS Legislative Bill Framed to Permit Two Mill Levy for City Musicians. A bill to permit municipalities to levy a tax of not to exceed two mills for the employment of bands will be introduced in the coming legislature, Fred E. Waters of Elkhart, president of the Indiana .Bandmasters Association, said today. The bill will provide that on petition of 5 per cent of the legal voters of a city, the quetsion of the levy may be submitted to the voters at the next election. Philosopher Visits Chile B.y United Press BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 19.—Jose Ortega Gasset, noted Spaniard, who has been visiting here, departed for Chile today.

Possibility that the Leonids might never again enter the earth's atmosphere in large groups was seen after the planet Jupiter, the sky monarch, “pulled” the meteors out of their course in 1899, the year that the earth would have passed through the, thickest portion of the meteors. This year’s display indicated that other forces had righted the influences of Jupiter and the Leonids were back in their normal course of 1833.

TURKS TU BE BIG AND JUICY, COSTNO MURE News Out of Commission Row Is Sweet Music to Feast Buyers. SHIPMENTS ARE SLOW Chinchilla Rabbits Make Appearance on Scene as Delicacies. By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 19.—More and better turkeys for the nation’s feast table this Thanksgiving were forecast today in reports to commission houses here from the plains states, where the gobbling of doomed fowl has become music to the natives. The Thanksgiving turkey won’t cost any more this year than it did in 1927—between 55 and 60 cents a pound—but thanks to Uncle Sam, it will be a much nicer turkey. The commission men don’t take credit for that. The government imposed restrictions on the Texas crop, permitting only the very best fowl to leave the state, and the government gets the glory. Otherwise this promises to be a fairly normal Thanksgiving. Weather Slows ’Em Up Warm weather has slowed up shipment of turkeys. Birds “on the hoof” are coming in large numbers now and “off hoof” turkeys will begin arriving Nov. 24. They should be in the hands of retailers a week from tomorrow. Feeding conditions this autumn have been better than usual and that as well as the government curtailment of low-grade shipments will add to the quality of the feast next week. Fewer turkeys come from Texas now than from other parts of the country. Wisconsin, Minnesota and lowa have come into their own as big turkey-raising states. Geese also are plentiful this year, as are ducks, guineas, Alaskan reindeer, chinchilla rabbits, English venison, bear meat and capon. Rabbits Are Delicacy The commission men hope all won’t feel bound to serve turkey, as large quantities of other good foods are going to be on sale, too. Chinchilla rabbits, which sell for 50 and 60 cents a pound, are considered a delicacy. They are milk-fed and although raised for their fur, their meat is as tender as that of a chicken. English venison will advance to $1 a pound and bear meat to 75 cents about forty-eight hours before Thanksgiving. Other ingredients and accessories of seasonal feasting— except liquids, which will be discussed In another dispatch at a later date—are unchanged over last yera to cheaper. Enough for Feast Maurice Aaron, who has been catering to the American appetite for feathered foods for the last forty-three years, estimated that a family of five could stuff itself to the bursting point at an outside cost of SB. Here is the menu and costs as Aaron drew them up: Turkey (eight-pounder, allowing enough for two days of hash) Potatoes, sweet and Irish 25 Celery 2 5 Cranberries for sauce .30 Nuts Pumpkin for pies 35 Coffee, soup, etc.... 1.00 Total $745 HELD FOR SMUGGLING Ship’s Steward Arraigned on Charge Diamonds in United States. Bd) United Press NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—William Ballyn, chief steward of the Cunard liner Berengaria, will be arraigned today on a charge of attempting to smuggle two packages of diamonds worth “several thousand dollars” into the United States. During his examination by Special Agent Norman Pike, Ballyn implicated Traffic Policeman John T. Mclntyre as an alleged go-between, who, he said, was supposed to deliver the diamonds. GRILL~E)GDRY SLEUTHS Philly Crime Investigation Now in Fourteenth Week. B.y United Pres* PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 19.—The special grand jury investigating police corruption and the underworld here entered Its fourteenth wefe. today, still questioning members of the disbanded unit No. 1, former prohibition enforcement squad. Eight former members remain to be questioned by the Juniors. Many of the members have large fortunes about which the jurors wish to question them. HELD FOR CAR THEFT Two Negroe Boys Captured After Chase. Arthur Oliver, 17, of 1330 Roosevelt avenue, and Lawson Jacks, 15, of 1504 Cornell avenue, both Negroes, were arrested on vehicle taking charges early today after they deserted a stolen automobile and were captured in a chase. The car, owned by Charles Eck, 1320 Broadway, was deserted at Park and Arch streets and Arthur Boehm, 1321 Central avenue; Clarence Fissler, and Paul Morris, both of 1328 Central avenue, who recognized the car, gave chase and captured them.