Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 289, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1929 — Page 18

PAGE 18

THREE MURDER CHARGES ASKED IN DRY KILLING True Bills to Be Demanded of Special Grand Jury in Illinois Case. Bv United Pro* GENEVA. HI.. April 24.—Three true bills charging murder or accessory to murder will be demanded of the special Kane county grand jury investigating ' raid killing of Mrs. Lillian Oe ' tsf Aurora. Robert A. Milroy, assistant prosecutor, said today. Milroy. attorney for the De King family, but acting as assistant to George D. Carbary, state's attorney, said he would ask the grand jury for a murder indictment against the leader of the raiding parley. Roy Smith, deputy sheriff, who killed Mrs. Df King and accessory to murder indictment of deputies Ha’/ Treadwell and Charles Anderson. Milroy '■aid he would ask indictment for perjury against Eugeni Boyd Fairchi'd, investigator, who admitted he swore to a false affidavit of a purchase of liquor at the De Kin? home. Fairchild wa? freed of a perjury charge when a justice 01 a peace ruled hi" affida-.it -va illegal beeauct' 'he name of the Deity was not mentioned when the investigator '.ore to hi statement MProy appeared before the grand jury i ■ it ness. He re - pealed hi" testimony at the inquest; that' he was taking with Mrs. De Kinq on the telephone -then he was .she’ >•; Deputy .Sheriff Smith. said he was convinced Mrs. De King was killed as she tan calling for help. M.iiroy was reported to have admitted to the jurors that he once prosecuted Joseph De King, husband of the slain woman, for a liquor law violation, which resulted in a five-day sentence for De King. RAPS ‘NATIONAL HONOR' AS CAUSE FOR WAR U. S. Mould Hate Been Better Off Slaying Out nf M orld Conflict. "We would h-'—c been better off , and t,lie world ould have been better off if we had never taken part j in the World war.’’ Such is the opinion of Kirby Page, editor of Die World Tomorrow and fighter for peace, who addressed the Indianapolis branch of the Internationa! Relations Council at the Lincoln Tuesday. “The way to world peace is through discarding the doctrine of protection of property of nationals at all times and any cost and discounting the value of fiehting lor so-called ‘national honor.’” he said. “Explanations of war arc never the causes of the conflict.” hr told his hearers. “Any soldier in ,the World war. allied or entente, would have given exactly the same reasons for fighting. Fighting for his home and country. "When poople; go tn war the' are intoxlcaTd with emotions, and the way to prevent war is to haft, this emotional drunkenness by removing its causes.” War Veteran. 81. r*< p s ft/Tien- I'/' ANDERSON Ind ipril M.— Bcn.lßmm Hawkins. 84. Civil ear veteran. is dead at his home here. He served with company A. l?4th Indiana regiment through three years of the rebellion. He retired from farming a few 'cars ago and had since resided bf'"C 'nh a daughter, Mrs. Edna Jackson. kidney fains and RACK-ACHE CONE T?ij nf \cnniTtiy~ Palm. Vfter Two V ears* illness. Feels Fine. People troubled with kidne- and bladder difmdnrs win hr glad to read a letter rrcep-f- written by James Shemberg'-r. 1302 South 31st St.. South Betid. Tnd. He says: "No one knows the pain T suffered the last two years with kidney trouble and bladder weakness. At times my back felt as if it would break, so sharp were the pains. Every night mv sleep disturbed. My ankles were swollen, my appetite was poor, nothing tasted good any more. T was badly constipated, extremely nervous, lost weight rapidly and was all run down. Life wa pretty miserable. I just had to drag myself around to do my work. Other medicines I tried didn't do me a bit of good, and I was almost hopeless when I began taking Viuna. Right away it helped me. The terrible back ache stopped, the swelling in my ankles went down, and 1 could get a full night's rest. My appetite picked up. and soon I was feeling much stronger and better in even' way, was able to do a full day's work. I have no trouble now with my back or kidneys. The constipation and nervousness have gone and I feel better today than for many years. Viuna is sure a wonderful medicine. - ’ Viuna has worked wonders in thousands of desperate cases of kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism. It may be the making of you. Try one bottle under positive guaranty. $! at druggists or mailed postpaid byIceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis. Ind.

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NANCY'S DARK STAR GETS ITS VICTIM lorna Moon Gives the Reading World a Character That Will Cause a Storm of Hot Talk. BV WALTER D. HICKMAN THE life oi Nancy Pringle was always a storm and her story as related by l orna Moon in "Dark Star ' is going to cause a lot of hot talk. I" cems to me just as Nina Leeds in "The Strange Interior has been for months the most discussed lad; on the stage, just so will Nancy bf the most talked of girl in Action this year. Here is a character that is romance and passion, not a symbol, but the real article it.sell. Nancy is so overpowering in her mental and physical adjustment to passion that she becomes romantic realism itself.

There is a decided O'Neill touch to ; his story and to this character and Nancy, the "imaginary'’ prod- . net ol Lorna Moon, seems to nestle ver close to O'Neill's heroines. Not that the author has borrowed any ol .he realistic thunder from O'Neill, but rather that in fiction he has become the great showman ana writer of life just, as O'Neill is. -Dark star” Is published by the : Bobos-Merrill Company of Indianapolis and if I am not all wrong this one is going io be a best seller for many months. It sells for $2.50. Then, what kind of a girl is this t Nancy who is going to cause more buzr. of conversation than “Elmer Gantry’’ did? The author tells you in the first line of the first chapter of "Dark Star.” just what kind of a young- i ster she is. The author tells you in the first line as you meet Nancy—" Nancy was glad when her grandmother, died. Glad, but a little afraid, like some wild thing, long caged, suddenly let loose." Then v;c see this feirl who knows that she was bom under the dark star of an unmarried father and mother. The fact didn't bother her. The thing that bothered Nancy was whether Iter father was the lov r groom of stallion horses or tire head of the proud but insane house of the Fasseferns. After her grandmothers funeral Nancy decided that the greont was not her father, just by looking at his horrible face. She knew that that thing could not be her father. So she decides that she is a. Fassetern. a member of a family that generally committed suicide. Was not Nancy a little wild? A little mad? And when she grew up and had her "love" experience with .a young bui temperamental composer oi pipe organ music atrd her other passionate experiments with life. Nancy knew that she was a mad Fasscfern. And giving herself that cloak of iiiad respectibility. Nancy when she faced the result of her mad but beautiful love with *he composer, Nancy decided that she was not the illegitimate thing of Willie Weams, the groom, but that she was a Fassef cm. Nearly all the Fasseferns rode to their death in unique suicide. So Nanev runs to hers, throws herself over a ehfftop and she smiled "as the sharp black teeth of the sea came up to meet her." because, she knr->- that 3 hf. r, a Fassefem*. Tim book starts with death and traged" and it ends that way. a locirai and a realistic way. In the iit> story nf Nancy, you meet Divot Mag. Mir '-'Hage hatrack, who murdered Nancy's good for nothing mother because she was about to tell Nanc; a lie about her birth which wou'd make the child think that her da.d was the groom. Since "The American Tragedy" wc have had no murder done in fiction so logically and so completely as when Divot Meg coaxes Bella, Nancy's mother, to go to her final sleep. You w ill meet the elder Mrs Anderson. the mother of the pastor of the kirk, who is one of the cleverest old dames who ever graced a page of fiction. She is*n unholy old ; thing because she plans a long fight ; against the wife of her son. This battle is a masterpiece and one of the finest created scenes in this story. And no wonder that Nancy fell tn love with the Whistling Boy. the ; lad who becomes a great composer of orcan music. He was made for ; dreams, a little love, but without the strength to pay the price, and ; he w as surely made for passion. And so was Nancy—passion when love came. That was Divot Meg's code of life. Even when realism becomes stark naked, even when Divot Meg airs her philosophy of life in cruel straight terms, even when Nancy in meeting passion Is interested and not afraid, we have a gigantic con-

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Best Sellers The follov mg is a list of the six best sellers in fiction and nonfiction in Brentano's New York stores for the week ending April 20: FICTION "Dotisworth.-- Sinclair Lewis 'Warcourt Brace: $2.50. "Dark Hester. " Anne Douglas’ Secjgaick 'Ho'JZ'nton Mifflin': $2.50. "Round Up ' Rinz Lardner 'Scribner i; $2.50. Jehovah’s Da.-."’ Mar; Border* iDoubledav Doran'. 51.50. •'A Dish for the God..” Cyril Kinnc 'Doubledap Doran I; $2.50. ■Si: Mrs. Greenes.” lorna Rea 'Harper l ; $2.50. NON-FICTION "Henrv the Eighth," Francis Hackctl 'LI .erightl; $3. Sword.- and Roses— Joieph Hergcsheimer ‘Knopf*: $3.50. "Cradle of the Deep— Joan Lovell (Simon A: Schusteri: $3. “The Art of Thinking— Ernest Dimmet 'Simon & Schusteri; $2.50. "The Modern Temper," Joseph Wood Krutch 'Harcourt Brace'; $2.50. "Mid-Channel," Ludvig Lewisohn (Harper*; $3.50.

ception of life and passion. Not a cheap thing, but a magnificent tapestry of life. Nancy runs true to her dark star and in permitting Nancy to do that, the author takes her place among the few modern writers who can turn out an honest novel, a real novel. It is not necessary tor me to tell you to read “Dark Star." because Nancy will be torn to pieces and defended more often in the next few months than any other dame of modern fiction. Indianapolis theaters today offer: “Girl Trouble." at English's: Charles Bennington, at the Lyric: "Hot Stuff." at the Indiana: “Nothing but the Tuth." at the Circle; “Coquette." at Loew’s Palace: “Wolf Song." at the Ohio: "Speed Girls." at the Mutual: "Hearts in Dixie." at the Apollo, and “So That's It." at the Colonial. SMUGGLING IS FOUGHT Bv United Press BUFFALO. N. V.. April 24.—'The coast guard has started its annual summer drive on smuggling on Lake Erie with fast cutters and picket boats located at Cleveland. Monroe. Mich.: Erie. Pa.: Dunkirk. N. Y.. and Buffalo. The boats were recently released from their winter ports at Erie. According to officials at coast guard headquarters here, but three picket boats will be detailed for duty in the Buffalo district until the. ice clears from the harbor. It was estimated the lower end of Lake Erie will be free from ice floes about May l. Mrs. Hoover Likes Fishing Or- Times Special KOKOMO. Ind.. April 24.—Fishing is one of Mrs. Herbert Hoover's favorite pastimes, according to Bruce Krise, Kokomo beauty specialist. who gave her a marcel while he was at a Miami Beach <Fla.> hotel.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BIRTH CONTROL CRUSADER ASKS RAID APOLOGY Speeding Dropping of All Charges Demanded by Margaret Sanger. BV DOROTHY MAHONEY United Press Special Correspondent NEW YORK. April 24.—Margaret ■ Sanger believes the city of New’ York owes her an apology ar.d speedy dropping of all charges in connection with the police raid upon her birth control clinic research bureau here. Mrs. Sanger is not a defendant in the case, three women doctors and tw’o nurses having been arrested. Their hearing was to continue today in chief magistrate's court. The noted birth control advocate declared the object of the’ research | bureau is “to correlate the physical. ’ mental, social and medical aspects ; of the human being in connection I with large or small families. "If women had an opportunity : to space their children, our maternal mortality would be the lowest instead of the highest in any country I of the world," she said. “Maternal mortality has been growing higher for the last ten years. Tt takes two years to build i up the system after a child is born. Mrs. Sanger said her clinic had been the means of conveying information on contraceptive measures to some 12.000 physicians. Similar clinics are scattered ' throughout the country. Chicago | having five and Los Angeles six. In Los Angeles the city board ot health manages five of the six j clinics, she said.

OIL FACT IS SIGNED Standard and German Dye Trust in Agreement. Bv United Press BERLIN, April 24.—An agreement signed between the Standard Oil Company and the German dyestuffs trust. L Cr. Farbenindustrie, was viewed today as of widespread importance, affecting the oil. coal, dyestuffs and rubber industries ot the world. Especial Importance was attached to the section in which the companies agreed to make researches in the development of synthetic rubber. If successful, the researchers were envisioned as freeing the United States of dependence on the British world-wide rubber monopoly. The agreement was signed last week, but its terms were made public only Tuesday The dye trusts' projects elsewhere will be abandoned in favor of the working agreement with the Standard Oil. Those projects include the industry It. had planned in South Africa to make oil from coal. Child Recovering Sight tV Times Special UNION CITY. Incl.. April 24. Jane McClintock. 13. is slowly recovering her sight after being suddenly stricken blind, due. the at- , tending physician says, to exces- ! sive reading.

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REBELS' LEADER OFF TO BATTLE Escobar to Clash With Troops of Calles, Bv United Press MEXICO CITY. April 24.—General J. Gonzalo Escobar, rebel com-mander-in-chief, was marching southward today to aid his- west coast army at Masiaca, which the j fractals were preparing to attack. The Mexican consulate at El ! Faso advised the government of Escobar's departure for the south, i The rebel general had 500 men with ; him, the consulate said. No definite reports of fighting at Masiaca have reached here, but some government quarters believed the opposing forces already had exchanged shots. The last definite word from Elias Plutarco Calles, federal commander, was dated Monday night and indicated a battle was imminent. YOUTH CHARGED WITH MAIL BOX ROBBERY Theft of 150 Letters From North • Side Apartments Charged. Thurman Swan. 17, of 851 College avenue, today faced federal postal charges following his arrest Tuesaay and alleged confession of theft of more than 150 letters from twenty-one north side apartment mail boxes. The arrest was made by Detective Houlihan and Hubbard and Postal Inspectors Ela and Garrigus. Stvan was given a one-year suspended jail I sentence by Criminal Judge James A. Collins Dec. 26. 1928, on ,a burglary charge. Tuesday he admitted forging indorsement on a $38.85 check made out to Robert Springsteen and cashing the check.

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FIND HOOVER’S FIGURE LOW ON DRY VIOLATIONS U. S. Statistics Show Ratio Is Much Higher Than 8 Per Cent. BY HERBERT LITTLE United Press Staff Correspondent.

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ony convictions possibly may be explained by the fact that only a small percentage of violations under the federal prohibition laws were felonies prior to the recent enactment of the Jones act. New York and several other states also leave gaps in prohibition statistics because they have no state enforcement acts. The survey upon which Hoover based hi§ 8 per cent figure has not been made public, but White House officials said the actual percentage of prohibition felony cnvictions found was 7.3 per cent and that Hoover used 8 per cent as a round figure.

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