Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 260, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1929 — Page 2

PAGE 2

GARY GIRL IS MURDERED BY NEGROAXMAN Mutilated Body Is Found on Prairie; Suspect Is Held in Jail. Bu United Press , GARY, Ind., March 20.—A sixfoot, 200-pound Negro, in whose room was found a hatchet matted with blood and hair, was arrested, today as a suspect in the murder of 20-year-old Josephine Adorizzi. The suspect said his name was Zillis Mack.

Several women who recently have been frightened by a Negro brandishing a hatchet were called to identify Mack. The body, disfigured by blows, was partly stripped of clothing and had been hidden in a culvert. The girl had been struck three times on the head, and two teeth had been knocked out. Her purse, said to have contained a small amount of change, a wrist watch and her hat were missing. Police believed that she had been killed on the sidewalk and dragged into a vacant lot, where she was assaulted and robbed. Two school boys-found the body while at play. - The girl’s sweetheart was questioned, but immediately released when he said he had aided in tlie search for her. HOW ONE WOMAN LOST 20 POUNDS OF FAT Lost Her Double Chin Lost Her Prominent Hips Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor Gained in Vivaciousness Gained in Shapely Figure If yqu’re fat—first remove the CB.US6! KRUSCHEN SALTS contain the 6 mineral salts your body organs, glands and nerves must have to function properly. When your vital organs fail to perform their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can’t throw off that waste material —before you realize it—you’re growing hideously fat! Try one quarter of a teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS ,in a glass of hot water every morning—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat has vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you feel younger in body—keener in mind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS at any drugstore (lasts 2 months). If even this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat—if you don’t feel a superb improvement in health —so gloriously energetic—vigorously alive your money gladly returned.—Advertisement.

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Poor Autoists “There are 850.000 automobiles in Indiana and only 40,000 persons paying income tax,’’ George L. Foote, collector of internal revenue, said today commenting on income tax rereturns. According to these figures only 5 per cent of the automobile owners of Indiana have an income large enough to be taxed. An increase of $350,000 is noted this year in income tax returns over last year, notwithstanding the corporation reduction of from 13*4 to 12 per cent, and the credit increase from $2,000 to $3,000. The better showing for 1928, Foote said, was attributable to better business conditions throughout the state.

STATE R. N. A. IN CONVENTION 250 Attend Conclave in Crawfordsville. Bu Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE; Ind., March 20.—More than two hundred and fifty Royal Neighbors of America attended the first' session of the annual state convention here Tuesday. The headquarters of the convention have been established at the Crawford hotel. Mrs. Erma Clinger of Indianapolis presided at the annual banquet held Tuesday night at the Masonic temple. Short talks were made by each of the state officers and district deputies. Following the banquet, the Wabash college glee club entertained the assemblage with a short musical concert. A dance for members of the lodge and their families ended the evening’s entertainment. Officers for the coming year and delegates to the national convention will be elected and the new officers installed at the session this afternoon. A memorial service tonight will end the two-day convention.

CONTINUE KLAN CASE Fourth Trial of Former Kligraph Delayed. NEWPORT, Ind., March 20. Charged with arson, the fourth trial of Samuel Withrow, former kiligraph of the Ku-Klux Klan, has been continued. Withrow was charged with burning the Bridgeton school in Parke county in 1924. He has been tried twice in Parke county and once in Vermillion, the jury failing to agree in each instance. McCowh Speaks in Anderson "T ANDERSON, Ind., March 20. Dr. J. P. McCown of Indianapqlis, professor of urology at Indiana university school of medicine, addressed the Madison County Medical Society here Tuesday night

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FRANKFORT TO HAVE AIRPORT; LANDJLEASED Columbus Also Acts for Aviation Advancement, Forming Company. Bu Times Special FRANKFORT, Ind., March 20. Frankfort is to have a municipal airport. This was assured yesterday when the pity leased eighty acres of ground from Mrs. A.- B. Gossett, direptly adjoining, the field operated by the Frankfort Aero Club, one mile south of the. city, on state road 39. For the present the city's field will be operated by the Aero Club. A contract is to be entered into whereby each will have the right to use the ground of Ihe other, making in effect one field of 125 acres. Location and lay of the land is said to be ideal for the purpose. The city’s lease is for five years! with the privilege of purchase during that period for a price not to exceed S2OO an acre. It is planned to build an additional hangar and to place a revolving beacon. Columbus After Airport COLUMBUS. Ind.. March 20.—A movement launched here recently to secure an airport for Columbus is meeting with success and definite steps toward formation of an airport company were taken when a score of men interested in the project met in the Chamber of Commerce rooms today. J. Clifford Noblitt was selected as chairman and Ellis Lortz secretary treasurer. Incorporation papers were drawn and presented at the meeting and they probably will be accepted at a special session to be held later. A drive to sell airport stock was launched. Already $4,000 worth of stock has been sold. It is hoped to raise SIO,OOO. A number of men interested in aviation attended the meeting, including F. Swain, manager of the Southern Indiana Fliers Company of Seymour: Ray Kuhl of South Bend, state agent for the Eaglerock airplane; Clyde Shockney, manager of the Kokomo airport, and G. C. Younglove, a Kokomo aviator. MAN KILLED BY GAS Another Overcome in Rooming House at Anderson. Bu United Press ANDERSON. Ind., March 20. H. G. Daniel wasr found dead and Hibert Cullars overcome by gas in adjoining rooms'at a rooming house here today. It was believed that both men had lighted gas lights, which later went out, letting the gas pour into the rooms. Marion Man Is Dead Bn Times Special' MARION, Ind., March 20.—J. L. Reeker, 76,, for twenty-five years master mechanic of the Marion Paper Company, died here at the home of his son, A. W. Reeker, after a three weeks’ illness.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Trackless Train to Begin 3-Year Tour of World

The newest trackless train, built in Indianapolis.

KILLING DENIED BY EX-SHERIFF Zimmerman Trial Set for April 8 in Angola. By United Press ' ANGOLA, Ind., March 20. Charles Zimmerman, former Steuhen county sheiiff, pleaded not guilty when arraigned in circuit court here, charged with the murder of Thomas Burke, rum runner and bank bandit, last August. Zimmerman’s counsel immediately filed a motion for a change of venue, the motion being sustained. James L. Harmon, Elkhart, was agreed on by both the defense and prosecution to hear the case. The trial date was set for April 8 and Zimmerman’s bond of $25,000 was continued. Burke’s death, rum running, and the robbery of the First National Bank of Angola recently was investigated by the grand jury.'

CLOCKS TO MOVE OP Delco-Remy Plant on Fast Time in Anderson. Bu Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., March 20. This city will travel an hour ahead of the clock after May 1, when the Delco-Remy Corporation of General Motors will go on daylight saving schedule. While the advance in time is not recognized officially, fc isiness houses and transportation lines advance schedules to meet those of the 9,000 Delco-Remy workers.

ALUMNI SECRETARY AT WABASH WILL LEAVE Two Other Members of Faculty Not to Return. Bn Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, March 20. —William H. Howard, for the last two years alumni secretary . r Wabash college, has resigned to do graduate work in English, President Louis B. Hopkins announced Tuesday night. Howard was graduated from the local institution in 1927. Two other members of the Wabash college faculty will not be back next yean Professor W. Norwood Brigance, head of the department of speech, will do graduate work, while Richard Lattimore, of the classical department, will attend Oxford university, England, as a Rhodes scholar. C. H. Foust, Wabash graduate, will become a member of the speech department staff. No successor has been named for Lattimore. BANK TO BE REOPENED $25,000 Is Raised at Meeting in Farmersburg. By United Press FARMERSBURG, Ind., March 20. —The Farmersburg State Bank, closed recently by its directors, will reopen soon, according to announcement. At a meeting, subscriptions totaling $25,000, were raised to provide the institution with capital. The bank's closing came after the State Bank at Hymera had closed its doors. A slight run occurred. TRACTION CHIEF QUITS Motive Power Superintendent Will Leave Anderson. Bn Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., March 20. Thomas H. Nichol, superintendent of motive power for the Union Traction Company of Indiana, has announced his resignation. He will leave April 1 to take a similar position with the Cleveland Railways Company. The resignation vacates the presidency of the Anderson Kiwanis Club. FACTORY GETS ORDERS Bu Times Special MARION, Ind, March . 20.—The Delta Electric Company today announced that it had obtained a large contract for its products from the Hupmobile and Hudson motor car companies. $10,829 IN FUND CHEST Bn Times Special MARION, Ind., March 20.—Workers reported pledges of $10,829 received Monday in the first day of the Community Fund drive for a $45,000 goal. Returns $135 Bn Times Special MARION, Ind., March 20.—Diogenes blew out his lantern and retired to the seclusion of his tub here today when W. A. Lillaid of Peru appeared at police station and turned over a wallet containing $135. Liliard found the wallet, which was identified by Elihu Bragg.

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Indianapolis Product Will Further Good Roads; Has Ail Comforts. Within ten days another Indianapolis trackless train will leave for New York to begin a tour around the world that is expected to take three years. This new trackless train with its luxurious parlor car was built by Homer O. McGee, Indianapolis manufacturer of special automotive equipment, and will be used in furthering good roads. The first train has been purchased by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, motion picture producers, and is now on tour of Europe. Luxuriously Equipped The trains are luxuriously equipped and contain everything necessary for comfortable traveling. Two engineers are in the caboose of the locomotive; with another engineer in the parlor car to operate the auxiliary motor. There is a conductor and the manager of the trip. Harold E. Tillotson of New York and Paris, who is engaged in exploitation work. The parlor car is equipped with a large double bunk that folds up into two divans when not in use. There is a dining table with large comfortable chairs, a writing desk and a half-dozen arm chairs. Fixtures Elaborate Lighting fixtures are elaborate, and other fixtures are of excellent material. An electric refrigerator furnishes the ice, and food may be cooked on a small stove. The housewife will be delighted with the closet space. A cord in the car operates a buzzer signal in the caboose, which signals for stops, full speed, etc. Those accompanying Tillotson are the engineers, Clyde Terry and Frank Selzer of Indianapolis, and the conduuctor, Richard Chinn, of Parkersburg, W. Va. Trial runs will be, made during the next week, preparatory to the long trip. Rushvilie C. of C. Doubles Roll RUSHVILLE, Ind., March 20. Membership in the Rushvilie Chamber of Commerce was doubled in a drive just concluded. The enrollment this year is 135, as compared with the sixty-eight in 1928.

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MEXICAN PORT IN STEEL GRIP OF GENERAL 24

Holds Mazatlan Against Rebels; Places Town Under Martial Law. BY DUANE HENNESSY T'nitcd Press Start Correspondent LOS ANGELES, March 20.—A 24-year-old federal general, comparatively new to military power, has held the important west coast seaport of Mazatlan, Sinalpa, under martial law for more than two weeks. The commandant is General Jaime Carrillo, product of military schools. He has seized city and federal funds, restricted the sale of food and gasoline, confiscated motor vehicles, cut off land communications and destroyed railroad facilities to impede a rebel march against the town, according to fifty refugees who came here on the steamship City of San Francisco. American mining companies took the wheels off all their automobiles trucks at night to prevent seizure, R, B. Davis of F! Paso, a freight agent for the Missouri Pacific lines, said. “When Carrillo came to Mazatlan from Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa, he placed the town under martial law and seized all city and national funds,” Davis said. “That started a run on the banks. “Then Carillo ordered no further sale of gasoline. We couldn’t even go fishing. “He put into effect a system whereby each person was allowed a certain quantity of food supplies each day and we could obtain them only with a ticket. “Carrillo advised all Americans to leave, hut the railroads north and south were out and those of us who wanted to leave had to wait for the City of San Francisco.”

Federals in Pursuit BY G. F. FINE United Press Staff Correspondent MEXICO CITY, March 20. Three federal columns concentrated at Torreon today to continue the vigorous offensive against rebels in the state of Chihuahua, Cavalry forces—4,soo strong—will lead the pursuit of insurgents in the north. General Lazaro Cardenas will command the advance column. The Presidencia announced that the rebel general, J. Gonzales Escobar, had looted the Torreon banks of approximately $510,000. Large quantities of merchandise also were taken by the fleeing rebels, according to a message from General Plutarco Elias Calles, who has established headquarters at Torreon. “Escobar and others are guilty of large scale robberies,” said President Portes Gil. “They are just common criminals.” Colonel Jose Maria Tampia, chief

of the presidential staff, estimated the rebels had stolen a total of 3,500,000 pesos at Monterey, Saltillo. Durango and Torreon. Private banks and the Bank of Mexico branches have been robbed, he said. Explains Evacuation BY JACQUES D’ARMAND ESCALON, Chihuahua. Mexico, March 20.—Charging that the Fortes Gil government is founded

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on crime and tyranny, General J. G. Escobar, commander-in-chief of rebel forces In Mexico, today defended his regime and explained that he evacuated Torreon to the federals to avoid loss of civilian life. “Former President Plutarco Elias Calles deliberately and cowardly bombarded the people of Torreon. making victims of men. women and children and violating rules of civilized warfare and rights of noncombatants,” General Escobar said.