Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 204, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 January 1929 — Page 14

PAGE 14

DEMOCRATS ARE URGED TO FIGHT BY ROOSEVELT ‘Will to Win’ Was Born in Defeat, Governor of New York Says. By United Pres ALBANY. N. Y., Jan. 14.—Democratic defeat in the last presidential election has served only to arouse in the party the “will to win,” according to Governor Franklin DRoosevelt. This fighting spirit, he said in a statement published today, was evident in communications from 3.000 county chairmen in all states sent him in answer to a questionnaire. Roosevelt’s statement, containing reports of chairmen’s resentment of “the methods employed against our candidate in the last campaign,” coincided with a meeting here Sunday night between the Governor and the defeated presidential candidate, Alfred E. Smith. Out of this conference is expected to arise an aggressive national movement for national rehabilitation of the Democratic party. A! to Speak on Air Smith is to speak Wednesday over the radio, and many believe he will echo the call of Roosevelt for an insistent national publicity campaign between now and the 1930 congressional and 1932 presidential elections. Roosevelt’s statement deplored past tendencies to let matters rest between campaign, and he advocated organization work from now on. "I think it is a safe statement to make that the effect of our failure at the polls last year, instead of discouraging the members of the Democratic party, has been to arouse in them the will to win,” Roosevelt’s statement said. i Compares Case With Tilden “This * clearly expressed feeling can onljf be compared to that which followed the theft of the presidency in the case of Tildan. Bigotry: ignorance of democratic principles; the spread by unspeakable and unAmerican methods of the most atrocious falsehoods; unfair and improper pressure brought tq bear upon workers in specially favored Republican industries: false claims of prosperity and kindred propaganda, cheated, so my correspondents feel, our party of the presidency. Roosevelt said the replies showed “not merely enthusiasm for the Democratic cause, but a deep sense of anger and resentment at the methods employed against our candidate in the last campaign.” There is determination, he said, “to set about immediately to make a repetition of such a dubiously earned victory impossible four years from now.” HUNTERS LOST IN WAR ON BAND OF INDIANS No Word of Men Seeking Apaches Since Jan. 3. Bu United Press DOUGLES. Ariz. Jan. 14.—Snoyblanketed Sierra Madre mountains held secret today the outcome of a war of extermination being waged against a plundering band of Apache Indians by a small force of white trappers and hunters. There was a growing fear here that twelve frontiersmen who set out nearly two weeks ago to track the Apaches through the ragged gorges of the mountain range may have been ambushed and wiped out by the savages. The men have not been heard from since they left, Jan. 3. Dog Killed: Boy Missing Bu Tim-* Soecial PRINCETON. Ind., Jan. 14.—William Fourthman. 14. is missing from his home here following killing of his dog by a policeman.

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Uncle Sam Stern With Film Star

Bu United Press HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 14.—Uncle Sam's naturalization department has no consideration for motion picture satellite! This fact, fairly hard for some to grasp, has been brought home to scores of foreigners who have sought citizenship or sought to regain membership in United States after marrying an alien. Hollywood may spoil and cater to them, but they find only a lot of hard work when they seek to become American citizens. Vilma Banky, the Hungarian star, is finding out about it now.

ALLITERATIVE AL TO HAND OVER PRIZES

Just Write a Takeoff on Some Times’ Story and Win a Prize. BY ALLITERATIVE AL Someone gets a couple of bucks Tuesday from The Indianapolis Times for his or her Friday contribution in the famous Peter Piper contest. A list of the five Friaay winners will be published Tuesday for the prizes of $2, sl, and three tickets to the Apollo, where “Riley, the Cop,” is playing. You, too, can enter the contest and have a lot 6f fun while competing for cash prizes and other awards. . ■ From today's Times select a story Just any story. And using the same theme, write' an alliterative story of not less than forty words and not more than 200. An alliterative story, you know, is one in which most of the words start with the same letter. Mail the letter to Alliterative A1 at The Indianapolis Times nqt later than midnight Tuesday. Winners will be announced Thursday. The winners from among the contestants who selec id stories from Saturday's Times will be announced Wednesday. The lucky ones each day get the same awards. And then there are two grand prizes of “best sellers” from the Bobbs-Merrill company. The book is “Exploring Your Mind

Special Bulletin

Vilma Banky

Although she married Rod La Rocque, a native bom American, she wanted her citizenship in her own right. Since taking out her preliminary papers she has discovered among other things that she must learn the complete Constitution of the United States with all its amendments—including the eighteenth. Miss Banky says she already can recite the preamble and adds that “that’s more than most people in Hollywood can do." She will receive her final citizenship papers at the February term of federal court.

With the Psychologists,” by Albert Edward Wiggam. Select a story from today’s Times, write your alliterative story, and send it to The Times right away. And here ere the rules again: Your story must be at least forty words long and not more than 200 words in length. The non-alliterative words will not be counted against you unless an average of more than four are used in each twenty words. The Peter Piper piece must tell a story, based on the news. Mail entries to Alliterative A1 at The Times. holds’lßON AND STiEEI. NEED PROTECTIVE TARIF Republic Chairman Gives Views to House Committee, Washington, Jan. 14.—Claiming that the American iron and steel industry’, representing an investment of $4,750,000,000, has been earning a return of less than 5 per cent for several years past, John A. Topping, chairman of the board of directors of the Republic Iron and Steel Company and vice-president of the American Iron and Steel Institute, told the house v?ays and means committee today that this industry will seek ’a revision of iron and steel schedules giving such protection as will be necessary for its future development and well being. He said that without adequate protection, the stabilization of this industry is impossible. 3 ■ DEAD BY VIOLENCE Fatal Fire Among Week-End Tragedies in Indiana. Violence caused the death of three persons in Indiana over the week-end. Mrs. Mary J. Kephart, 71. was fatally burned when fire destroyed her home at Morgantown. Charles Kramer, 22. Eastman, Wis., was killed near Laporte, on State road 20, when struck by a bus. Mrs. Mary A. Cain. 48, Columbus, mother of Henry Cain. Mrs. Anna Bruner and Mrs. Eliza Carson, Indianapolis, is dead of injuries suffered in a fall.

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DEATH OF SPY BARES GIGANTIC FORGERY PLOT Amazing Story of Intrigue, Fraud and Murder Is Brought to Light. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Foreign Editor, Seripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. —No blood-and-thunder thriller contains anything more astounding than the confession of the Russian spy who recently was stood up against a wall in Moscow and shot for “crimes against the state.” Sergey Druzhilovsky was his name and his favorite “racket” was to turn out spurious “state documents” to order, such as those just exposed by Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, bearing the forged signatures of Senators Borah and Norris, two of the best known and most highly esteemed members of the United States senate. Only 33 years old at the time of his sudden and dramatic demise, Druzhilovsky for years had been the center of a gang of international spies and forgers of state papers whose amazing activities overthrew governments, provoked mobilizations of country against country, and sent hundreds of innocent victims, men, women and children, to their doom. Game Still Alive Though Druzhilovsky is in his grave his body riddled by the bullets of a firing squad, the game which he helped invent still is very much alive. The documents exposed by the Reed committee of the senate prove that. Druzhilovsky and his ring stopped at nothing. The reputation of diplomats and statesmen meant less than nothing to them. They even connived at the planting of highly destructive bombs in crowded public places, to give the appearance of trutn to their forced documents. They almost caused a war between Russia and Poland. Their activities took in the United States, England, France, Germany, Bulgaria, China and other countries. The terrible explosion in the famous cathedral of Sofia, Bulgaria, killing more than a hundred Easter worshipers, was part of one of their enterprises, according to the spy’s own confession. He claimed he forged a document out of whole cloth, from data given him by one Popov, said to be a Bulgarian diplomat at that time living in Berlin, purporting to show that a communist revolution was to break out on a given date in Sofia, the signal being the blowing up of the great cathedral. Causes Several Deaths Not only did the explosion take place, but several men were arrested and put to death on the assumption that they had been among the revolutionary plotters. The forged document, the spy confessed, was virtually the only evidence against them. The now famous “Zinoviev letter,” which purported to show that British labor leaders were receiving funds from Soviet Russia, and which caused the defeat of the labor government of Premier Ramsay MacDonald and the conservative landslide which put Stanley Baldwin back in power, was one of the ring’s forgeries, according to Druzhilovsky. According to Soviet authorities, Druzhilovsky was a lieutenant in the Russian “white” army. Out of a job and an exile in Berlin, he claimed he became aware that communism had become a bugaboo that was scaring the whole world, so he hit upon a scheme to sell "documents” showing how Russia was Dlotting to plant the red flag on too of government houses everywhere. Police Seek “Grabber” By United Press ANDERSON. Ind.. Jan. 14—A grabber whose victims are mostly women and children is sought by police here today. Several have been attacked.

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AGAIN ON BATTLEFIELD Bloomfield War Veteran Gives Commands Before Death Ends Delirium. Bu United Press BLOOMFIELD. Ind., Jan. 14. With a command to comrades to “keep your eyes on the colors, keep in step,” Jeremiah Hatfield. Civil war veteran, was defeated in his last battle here. "Uncle Jerry,” as he was known throughout Indiana, died of pneumonia, contracted Thursday, his eighty-sixth birthday. The veteran, in his delirium, again carried his flag into battle, fought, gave orders, just as he did when a member of Company H, Thirty-first Indiana Volunteer infantry. PROBE RIOT IN PRISON Protest Over Food Causes 1,500 to Revolt. By United Press PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14. Prisoners in the Holmesburg county prison awaited action of the board of prison inspectors today on their protest and rioting against the food served to them. The prisoners, who were subdued Saturday with tear-gas bombs renewed their fight Sunday. Early in the morning they took up the cry “we want food.” Then three fires were started with furniture and mattresses. Philadelphia’s fire chief, Ross Davis, inspected the prison and ordered a fire company within the grounds to battle the flames. Forty policemen aided the prison guards in an attempt to maintain order.

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THREE TO FACE PROSECUTION IN CHILIWEDDING Blind Preacher, Husband of Girl, 11, May Be Tried for Bigamy. MARION. HI.. Jan. 14.—The marraige of 11-year-old Selinda Clendenin and the Rev. Joseph Milton Benton, 54-year-old blind Pentecostal preacher, has involved three men and possibly the girl’s mother in charges of perjury, bigamy and violation of the state marriage laws. Benton, the recent bridegroom, was in jail formally charged with bigamy, after receipt of a letter from Pentecosts in Blytheville, Ark., stating that Mrs. Joseph Benton, a member of the Pentecostal congregation there, was his first wife and never had been divorced. The blind pastor has admitted Selinda is his third wife, but contended he thought his first wife was dead. His second wife died of tuberculosis more than a year ago, Edward Hayfes. Selinda’s brother-in-law, who performed the ceremony faces a charge of violating the mariage laws, on the grounds he performed the mariage knowing the bride was a minor. Mr. and Mrs. Clendenin, the girl’s parents, face a charge of perjury, Roy Browning, state’s attorney, told the United Press. Repossessed Furniture May be bad (or balance due. leather Daveno (sold new (in ra for SBS) 3-Pc. Duofold Living Room (oa fa Suite (sold new for $105.00) 3-Pc. Cane Back Living Boom (sold new CCQ CA for $185.00) Odd Leather Chairs &c CA (sold new at $39.00) Rugs, all sizes In good #£ e A condition CP Heating Stoves, good condition with new stove CIQ CA guarantee CP “Plenty of Credit” ‘‘Make Four Own Terma” IDEAL FURNITURE CD. 141 W. WASH. ST.

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JAS. 14,1929