Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 228, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 February 1929 — Page 8
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DEATH RANCH OWNER FEARS MOITSRETURN Northcott to Hear Death Sentence Pronounced Today. Bn United Press RIVERSIDE, Cal., Feb. 11.—After a night of fear that a threatening mob would return to take him from his county jail cell, Gordon Stewart Northcott was to go into court today to be sentneced to die on the gal- { lows for slaying three young boys. ] The convicted murderer slept little during the night, tossing restlessly on his cot. He questioned jailers frequently to learn if there was any sign of trouble. Armed deputy sheriffs remained on duty all night, guarding against another visit from the mob of 200 men who demanded early Sunday that Northcott be turned over to them.
Wants to Find Graves Sheriff Olem Sweeters, who persuaded the mob to disperse and let the law mete out justice, remained in personal charge. Sheriff Sweeters said he was confident that N. H. Winslow, father of the boys Northcott was convicted of slaying, would keep his word and not lead another mob. At his home, the elder Winslow sobbed that he had “only wanted to find out what that fiend did with our boys’ bodies. We want to give them a decent burial.’’ Winslow insisted that he led the mob with no intention of harming Northcott, but only of making him disclose the location of the graves. The mob appeared early Sunday in more than fifty automobiles, which were drawn in orderly fashion for two blocks along the street on which the jail is located. Offers Home as Security Winslow, followed by several others, rang the gong at the jail door, and when Sweeters announced that he was “Winslow, and we want Northcott.’* Sweeters refused to surrender the convicted youth and announced that lie and his deputies would “fight to the' finish.” Winslow offered to leave a deed to his home as security that Northqptt would be returned safely, but pleaded that he and his wife “just have to know where our boys are buried/ The father finally consented to return to his home.
TRUCK HITS TEACHER Miss Mary Misch Severely Hurt Stepping From Car. Miss Mary Misch, 5345 East Washington street, a public school teacher, was injured critically. When she walked from behind a street car into a moving truck in front of her home this morning. She was taken to city hospital with severe scalp wounds and internal injuries. Frank Spadorcia, 509 South New Jersey street, was the truck driver. Witnesses said the accident was unavoidable, and Spadorcia was not held. NAMES LOYALTY DAY Sunday Preceding Inauguration Is Designated. ftp United Press PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Feb. 11.— Moderator Hugh K. Walker, of the Presbyterian church, has ordered Sunday. March 3, designated as “National Loyalty Sunday.’’ The celebration of the day is a part of the Christian citizenship plan of the church, and precedes the inauguration of President-Elect Hoover.
Listeriue kills 300,000,000 germs in 15 seconds Address the Lambert Pharmacal t> id you realize that Listerine was so Cos.. Dept. S. 80, St. Louis, Mo., powerful? V. S. A. Liard to believe, isn't it, when you reflect how pleasant and safe Lister\et in repealed terts employing the *4 & yyjgfplp^ cerm. used by test [§g r yil antiseptics full strength Listerine ~ killed 200 millions in 15 seconds! Mmk Mow vou ran understand w by you should use Listerine to cheek ordi- ' nary colds and sore throat—both caused b> germs. Keep a l *ttk handy and use it Coooll „, coMf wheß grrm , daily espectalU after exposure to to mout b or food. Bj u,ing lwhoc o germ-laden crowds. It helps you ,br hand- before **ery meal, yoo attack *oel trdofl trouble. I dte for onr elab- gerar and ieaaen the rbk ot cold. Remcmbe irate free book:''Pcr&oual Hygiene.*’ uis, mothers, when handling baby's food. Use it for SORE THROAT
Killed by Car
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Alvin Barnett, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Moses D. Barnett, 3037 Broadway, -who was injured fatally Sunday when he was run over by his own car. which he attempted to crank while it Was in gear.
BOY IS KILLED CRANKING AUTO Alvin L. Barnett Crushed When Car Starts. Attempting to crank his automobile while it was in gear, Alvin L. Barnett, 18, of 3037 Broadway, was injured fatally Sunday afternoon when the machine started suddenly and crushed him against a stone wall. The accident occurred at a filling Station at Thirtieth street ana College avenue. The youth was dragged more than thirty feet before being pinned against the wall. Filling station attendants extricated him from the wreckage and sent him to St. Vincent’s hospital, where he died soon after. Barnett was the son of Mrs. Jennie Barnett, publisher of the Indiana Jewish Chronicle, and Moses D. Barnett, secretary of the Barnett Bottle Company. He was a former student at Shortridge high school and was to have been graduated in June. He finished his school course last semester. Funeral services will be held at 2 this afternoon at the Linath Hazedek undertaking establishment. Burial will be in Kenesseth Israel cemetery.
CONSOLIDATION BILL UP Bp Times Special WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Railroad consolidation legislation will face a show-down in tjje senate interstate commerce committee next week when Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio, joint author of the bill, will ask a report recommending its passage. Opposing Fess’s plan is Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana who is prepared to oppose the measure on the floor, if necessary. Fess wants the committee to urge passage this session. There is assurance that house leaders will bring in a sp"'rl riil° to put the bill through the house before March 4 if he Senate acts. 820,000 Verdict in Death Case By Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., Feb. 11.— The Citizens National bank of Goshen has won a $20,000 judgment in Federal court here as administrator of the estate of William Alexander.'railroad section hand, killed by a train last July. The suit was against the New York Central railroad. The plaintiff showed that a man was not posted to warn track workers of approaching trains, as is customery. •
YOUNG NAMED REPARATIONS GROUP CHIEF Presides at Sessions to Juggle Millions in War Debt Problem. Bu United Praia PARIS, Feb. ll.—Owen D. Young, American unofficial delegate to the conference of reparations experts, accepted the chairmanship of the conference at its first penary session here today. Young confirmed his acceptance to newspaper men and he said: “I guess I am chairman after a long struggle. lam sorry, but I am not in a position to talk now.” The reparations conference formally opened at m. today in the blue room of the Hotel George V. and the fourteen delegates settled down to juggling the billions involved in the German settlement of war debts. Discussion of the question of how much Germany must pay in reparations for the World war doubtless will occupy weeks and probably months during which the committee of experts may make a trip to Berlin. *Thc tremendous task before the committee is to reach an agreement between Germany and the allies which will be satisfactory to both. The allies want all the reparations possible from Germany—they now receive $625,000,000 annually under the Dawes plan—while the Germans hope to reduce the annual payments and the total to the lowest possible amount. Dr. Hyalmar Schacht, president oLthe Reichsbank and head of the German delegation, went to work Sunday on plans for presenting the German viewpoint. While other delegates spent the
Hi , “I smoke a Lucky instead of eating sweets /O Lady Grace Drummond Hay, fjBiAC/U (f only woman passenger on I \ the Graf Zeppelin / ? **< r * , Hk \X "The fact that we werenot permitted to - /Ll * n | smoke from the time the Graf Zeppelin I Lahehurst only increased my appetite I for a Lucky Strike. Oh, how good that / first one fasted/ Vm really keen for B j Lucky Strike —the toasted fla cor is de* k| B B / lightfuL I smoke a Lucky instead of Jr eating siveets — that’s what many men :V: have been doing for years. I think it Reach , ill high time we women smoked Luckies fora mmrnmr ° . „ Lucky '’ •* and kept our figures trim. of a " x : W wB sweet. JjHSBk fg&p* T’TKE modem common sense way-reach M 1 /...'■’ V for a Lucky instead of a sweet. Everyone d ... - J! 9W is doing it—men keep healthy and fit, women J y f retain a trim figure. Lucky Strike, the finest tobaccos, skilfully blended, then toasted q to develop a flavor which is a delightful r~~Vscs=4 alternative for that craving for fattening — ® first woman to fly the cw<> _. s * Atlantic from Europe Sweets. mamm* Jr I ~ a\\ ■ to United States. Toasting frees Lucky Strike from impurities. WW / jy\ 20,679 physicians recognize this when /m ■ \ fall they say Luckies are less irritating than 1 other cigarettes. That’s why folks say: “It’s *ft I j good to smoke Luckies.” / JSbHt\ C\ fi ■ Authorities attribute the enorkY\ --c TOAsnoy / Mm\ • mous increase in Cigarette smoky' \, 1 ing to the improvement in the process of manufacture by the application of Hi Lucky Strike Cigarettes showed a greater in 1 wk 1 BT mI fr%jllUßMfaßpßri crease than alii ofher Cigarettes combined. This surely confirms the public’s confidence in the superiority of Lucky Strike. M T|,# 4._ _ _i.p J M Coast to coast radio hook-up every Saturday night through the National Broadcasting Company’s network. The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra h*“TheTunes thatmade Broadway, Broadway." TlllOat InitatiOU -NO COll^h• O 5929, The /.rnercto Tobcco Cos, Mnu(bet*
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
day paying visits or dining with friends, Schacht opened a series of conferences at which an outline of the German procedure was understood to have been made. Schacht arrived here armed with sheafs of figures intended to offset the Optimism of the report issued several weeks ago by S. Parker Gilbert, agent general of reparations. Gilbert's report indicated Germany was able to pay all reparations required under the Dawes’ plan for the first “normal” year. The first normal year was last year, when $625,000,000 was paid. - It appeared certain today that Gilbert would be called upon by the experts either to make specific statements regarding the condition of the German reich, or reiterate the substance of his reparations report. It was obvious to observers that Germany can not plead too much poverty in asking for a reduction of annual payments. An argument along that line was predicted some time ago but it was pointed out that such pleas would only serve to detract from the value of bonds which Germany hopes to sell abroad. The bonds could be used to meet reparations payments. ‘ Whatever place J. Pierpont Morgan, the second American delegate, may play in other reparation discussions, his will be a prominent one when the question of sale of the bonds comes up . The Germans hope to sell a large percentage of their bonds in the United States, and Morgan, as one of America’s foremost bankers, will be a strong influence in keeping the opinion of American bond buyers before the conference. EX-MAHARAJAH IS ILL ’'roGEEM AIN E-EN-LAYE, France, Feb. 11.—Because of the illness of the ex-Maharajah of Indore, the naming of the baby princess daughter recently born to his wife, the former Nancy Ann Miller of Seattle, will be postponed, it was announced today. The rites will be held when the former maharajah has recovered sufficient strength to stand the strain of the naming ceremony, which lasts from dawn to dusk. The ceremony will be secret.
M.E. LEADER URGES JAIL FOR BOOTLEGBUYER Clarence True Wilson Lauds Prohibition as Great Moral Victory. ‘•Punish the buyer of bcotleg liquor as well as the seller.” This plea was made by Dr. Clarence True Wilson, general secretary of the board of temperance of the Methodist Episcopal church, at the morning and evening services Sunday at the Edwin Ray Methodist church, Laurel street and Woodlawn avenue. This morning, Dr. Wilson spoke on “Jesus Christ, the Reformer” at the monthly meeting of the Methodist Ministers’ association at the Roberts Park Methodist church. Increase in the penalties for offenses against the ' eighteenth amendment was another suggestion of Dr. Wilson’s at the Sunday services. “The man or woman who spends money to transform a citizen into a criminal must be taught that it is not the bootlegger alone who is
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a criminal, but those of larger means who use their money to corrupt another man,” Dr. Wilson asserted. “The man who patronizes a bootlegger is responsible for maintaining this criminal class.” He approved the enactment of a law permitting courts to fine violators of the dry laws SIO,OOO and to send them to the penitentiary for ten months in order to “put the fear of God into the minds of those who fear neither God nor man.” “Too much emphasis has been placed on enforcing the dry laws and not enough on observance,” he said. “Betrayed in headquarters, weakly led, hammered by the press, and poorly supported bv th* public—prohibition is still the greatest moral triumph since the advent of Jesus Christ.” Dr. Wilson averred. Fire .Victim Buried B’l Times Special W i jjrviNSON, Ind., Feb. 11.—Funeral services were held Sunday for Mrs. Eldon Heagy, 36, who died of burns suffered when gas was ignited at her home.
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INSTANT RELIEF—THEN COLD DISAPPEARED! Experience of Miss Bertha Lee, Trained Nurse, Shows How Quickly Indianapolis People Now End Colds By Method Doctors Advise for Home Use Realizing the nedless misery and risk caused, by neglecting a cold, doctors are now recommending a method that brings almost instant relief—then quickly drives out the cold. And the experience of Miss Bertha Lee, trained nurse, is typical of what is being accomplished not only in honje use by numbers of people in Indianapolis and vicinity, but in extreme hospital cases.
DOCTOR USED QUICKEST WAY TO END HIS COLD Goes Straight to Seat of Cold and Drives It Out of System— Brings Quick, Sure Relief! In one's own home it is now possible to get quick relief—often in a few a stuffy head cold, cough or chest cold. For doctors are now recommending for home use a hospital certified remedy that is inexpensive, pleasant tq take and ideally suited to the delicate stomachs of old folks and children. L. R. Presley, for example, asked his doctor for a prescription when his cold got so bad he felt “achy” all over. The doctor immediately gave him a large dose of Ayer’s Pectoral and advised him to continue the treatment every half hour until the “feverish,” “achy” feeling was gone, then once every two hours. In just a few minutes he bgan to feel better and slept comfortably all night. In another day or so the cold congestion had disappeared entirely and he was back at work. Note: See other cagas—all certified by the attending: physician. Pleasant Way to Stop Child’s Cold By choosing the hospital certified method which physicians are now recommending so extensively for home use, Mrs, Geo. N. Williams, like numbers of mothers here, now know the quickest, safest and most pleasant way to end a child's cold. MbMH Mrs. Williams then C!ille,J 0D thoir family It -mm doctor when •her little ■ 1 daughter, Eva, was f kept from school b.v a severe chest cold. The S| i,' SB doctor advised a good fill•■a*j%lgjfe:iMM laxative followed by double strength doses y of Ayer’s Cherry I’ecBf ißflß toral every half hour *“ until relief began, then once every hour until congestion was relieved. By night she coughed less and the “grippy”. achy faeling began to leave. Neit morning she was lots better and in a day or so she was completely free from cold and back at , school. Note: Sec other cases —all certified j by the attending physician.
Speed of Relief Important To Avoid Danger of a Cold Co’ds r4ay not appear serious when have everything to lose and nothing to they first start. And they need not „ a j„ delay. Ayer’s Pectoral gives SSSI-"?.™ £ioK“ atlL "•£?. ■* to,taut ratiat-tta. time to set in. drives out every t e of the cold. But delay always makes a cold last This hospital certified remedy is longer! Often it increases pneumonia pleasant to take, pres, ibed by pbyrisk, sicians for home use and can b 4 had Why take this, needless risk? You -at the nearest drug store. INDORSED BY HOOK DKIG CO. AND ALE DBICOISTS
HOSPITAL CERTIFIED
.FEB. 11, 1929
Goes Straight to Seat of a Threatening Cold Miss Lee, for example, awoke with a slight fever and an “achy,” irritated feeling in her nose, throat and chest. Instead of ending it at once by prompt treatment, she neglected the cold to nurse a patient who was seriously ill. That night the cold bothered her so she could not sleep and by morning congestion caused her to fear pneumonia and call one of the hospital physicians. Acting on his advice she took double strength doses of Ayer's Pectoral—the hospital certified medication of wlid cherry, terpin-hydrate and other ingredients used to help reduce fever, clear up congestion and drive the cold out of one’s system. Relief began almost Instantly when she felt its comforting, healing warmth—from her nose passages deep down Into her chest. Congestion began to clear up and by night her fever was normal and the “achy” feeling had disappeared. Next morning she was able to go back on duty and In just a day or so all trace of the cold and cough had cleared up completely. Note! See other eases—all certified by the attending physician.
SOON ENDED COLD CAUGHT ON TRAIN Got Almost Instant Relief Wbea Doctor Advised Home Us* of Hospital Remedy By acting on the advice of her doctor, Miss Vivian Stover is still another, like numbers here, who realize how quickly a cold can now be ended and how much needless suffering a person goes thru by putting off the right treatment, Mias Stover caught a severe head cold in the sleeping car while returning from a visit to her sister, Mrs. E. H. Collier. Next day it started spreading thru her system, causing a high fever, rasping cough and “achy,” congested feeling in her chest. Consulting her doctor then, she w* advised to try double strength doses of Ayer’s Pectoral and by noon she felt like eating for the first time since the cold started. That night she was able to enjoy refreshing: sleep and awoke without the “achy”, congested feeling. When she returned to the doctor’s for examination the day following, there was no trace left of the cold. Note: See other cases—all certified by the attending physician.
