Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1929 — Page 2

PAGE 2

MANY ROBBED IN WEEK-END CRIME WAVE Homes Are Entered and Stores Looted; Three Slugged. Six stores were looted, one filling station held up. several homes entered and three persons slugged and robbed in a week-end wave of lawlessness. police reports showed today. Several hundred dollars worth of merchandise was removed Saturday night from the Samuel Cooper drygoods store. 2619 Shelby street. Two hundred and fifteen dollars hidden in the City Shoe Repair Company's shop, 42 Monument Place, at the close of business Saturday. was missing when the store was opened today. Several pairs of shoes and $13.75 was the loot of burglars who battered the door off a small safe in the G R. Kinney shoe store. 24 North Pennsylvania street. There was a large sum of money in a strong box inside, which was not opened. Cigarets Taken An undetermined amount of merrhaniise was stolen from John Polands grocery, 2021 West Washington street; cigars, cigarets and a small sum of money was the loot at the James and Roway pool room, 2232 East Washington street, and three boxes of cigars and several c rtons of cigarets were taken from fne shining parlor of Robert Jones, Negro, 1401 East Twenty-fifth street. Two bandits held up Harold Click, 443 North Kealing avenue, attendant at a Standard Oil Company filling station at State and English avenues, Sunday night, forced him to open the change safe and fled with s3l in a car believed to have been stolen a few minutes earlier from Olive and Prospect streets. It was owned by Robert Minton. 647 North Parker avenue. Slugged into unconsciousness while locking the door of her garage, Mrs. James E. Cronin. 2142 Park avenue, was robbed of S4O Sunday night. Two men slugged John Harper, 2430 Paris avenue at Capitol avenue and Ohio street Saturday night and took his watch and a small sum of money, he told police. William H. Bennett, 33. of 1923 j North La Salle street, told police j he was beaten and robbed of SBO as j he was about to lock the door of j his garage Saturday night. Hold Up Pedestrian Jumping from a coupe, two Ne- j groes held up Orville Draffa, 22. of I 227 East New York stret. at Shelby | street and the Belt railroad late j Sunday and robbed him of S3O. he ' told police. i Burglars stole clothing ar.d a ; watch valued at S3OO from the home of Parker A. James, 3355 North Meridian street. Two purses containing $22 were taken from the home of William Hindman, 467 North State avenue. Men who gave their names as Dan R. Burnett of Houston, Tex., and Ben K. Richmond. R. R. 7, Box 76, are held on charges of vagrancy pending investigation of a burglary at the home of Mrs. Rose Kindle, 1755 Somerset avenue where Burnett was rooming. They were arrested early Sunday in a Washington street restaurant In a car parked at the curb, police found two suitcases containing clothing of other roomers at the Kindle hom£, several watches, electrical supplies and two revolvers. STOPS ASTHMA OR NO PAY D. J. Lane, a druggist at 1413 j Lane Building. Sr. Mary's Kan.,. manufactures a remedy for Asthma in which he has so much confidence that he sends a $1.25 bottle by mail to any one who will write him for it. His offer is that he is to be paid for it after you are satisfied with results, and the one taking the treatment to be the judge. Send your name and address today.—Advertisement.

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This doctor and nurse are the bosses of a multi-millionaire. For when Oilman Harry F. Sinclair was received at the District of Columbia jail to begin serving his ninety-day sentence, he was assigned to special duty as the jail pharmacist and assist to Dr. Morris Hyman, left, prison physician, and Nurse Kathleen Wright. So Sinclair, who once studied pharmacy and worked as a drug clerk, compounds pills and prescriptions for ailing fellow prisoners.

Edison Faces Problem in Choosing His Successor

Six of America s leading psychologists, students of humand abilities, have been asked bv The Times and Science Service to tell how they would pick budding Edisons. The'ir suggestions, the results of years of study, should aid Mr. Edison and others in locating exceptional individuals and affording them opporttuntties. The lourth and fifth herewith. Following this series, president of Indiana’s leading < eges will give their views on this subject through columns of The Times. BY DR. DONALD A. L%IRD Editor of "Industrial Fsyehology” (Copyright, 1929, by Science Service) Very few men like Edison appear in a century and it will tax the wizard himself to pick a successor. Even though he may not uncover a genius of his peculiar caliber—and I doubt if he will—he unquestionably is doing a great deal through his search to stimulate the interest of a large number of young men in looking toward the future inventive developments of our civilization. It is to be hoped that Edison will impress upon the forty-nine most promising the importance in coming years of directing inventive effort to man's mental equipment, which his own search shows he realizes is vital to carry on our civilization without a lopsided development. His questionnaire will give an approximate measure of the practical general intelligence of the candidates, which is important for inventive genius. But how to measure the emotional drives and real desire for achievement. which also are important, still is a problem. These non-intelligence factors may be more necessary than mere knowledge and intelligence. BY DR. L. J. O’ROURKE Director of Personnel Research, 11. S. Civil Servcie Commission (Copyright. 1929. by Science Service! Mr. Edison's experiment will stimulate general interest in the subject of special aptitudes and individual differences. The forty-nine different methods adopted by the governors and the District of Columbia commissioners should challenge research students to improve our methods of selecting those with talent. It would be interesting, though difficult, to follow the contributions to science of the competitors making high and low scores on the test given by Mr. Edison.

MANY SEE HOSPITALS Institutions Play Hosts to City People. Hospitals of the city donned “bib and tucker" Sunday and played host to Indianapolis. Teas, tours of inspection and a general open house celebrated National Hospital day in city institutions. At the Indiana un ! ’ ersity hospitals—the James V, nitcomb Riley, Robert W. Long and Coleman—Dr. E. T. Thompson, administrator, headed a special committee which provided guides to visitors and entertained them with tea at the Riley hospital. Bishop Edgar Blake of the Indianapolis area of the Methodist Episcopal church, addressed citizens visiting the Methodist hospital. At the city hospital nurses and officials demonstrated methods caring for patients. Babies born during the past year were honor guests at Indiana Christian hospital. Dawes, Hoover to Confer Bn United Press CHICAGO, May 13.—Charles G. Dawes will leave for Washington today to confer with President Herbert Hoover and Henry L. Stimson, secretary of state, relative to Dawes’ ambassadorship to England. Dawes plans to sail June 7, it is understood.

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$693,000 AIR BONDS TO BE SOLD ON WEDNESDAY Cit> Airport Money to Be Available Next Week. The $693,000 bond issue for the city airport will be sold Wednesday noon by City Controller Sterling R. Holt. The money from the bond issue is expected to be available in a week following the sale. The city engineering department is rushing development of the landing field site. More than a dozen inquiries have ; been received from Chicago and I New York financial houses, according to A. B. Good, deputy city con- ! trailer. i “That is the largest number of ! inquiries eve" received on any bond | issue," Good said. The bonds will ! bear 4'*; per cent interest. ALL IN THE FAMILY Father and Daughter Opposing Candidates In Jersey Election. Bu United Press LINDENWALD, N. J., May 13. A father and daughter are opposing candidates for tax collector in this new borough. r * The father, John A. Hoeflinger, has been indorsed by the Booster party and the daughter, Mrs. Viola E- Schumacher, is running on the regular Republican ticket. “The Republicans must have her hypnotized,” said Candidate Hoeflinger, retired from business. “There are no hard feelings,” said Candidate Schumacher, mother of two sons and present Clemen ton township sidewalk clerk. SENTENCE FORMER COP John K. Stroh to Serve 15 Months } in U. S. Prison on Theft Charge. John K. Stroh, former Indianapolis policeman convicted by a fed--1 eral court jury of motor theft, must | serve fifteen months in Leaveni worth penitentiary, Federal Judge | Robert C. Baltzel! decided. Other sentences imposed by the court Saturday include: Mrs. Mary Sansbury, Negro. 407 Agnes street, narcotics, three years in the women's prison at Alderson, W. Va,; William F. Jung, formerly of 820 East ; Georgia street, liquor, sixty days; j Mrs, Maggie Bridges, Negro, 929 ; Davidson street, liquor, sixty days; I Roy Anderson, Negro, 1553 North Arsenal avenue. liquor, seven months; Mrs. Sally Hughes, Negro, 1019 North Illinois street, narcotics, sixty days. CHILDREN TO GIVE PLAY Irvington Branch Library Numbers Will Be In Cast. Pupils of School 57 who are members of the Irvignton branch library will give a play Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the school in the interests of the library summer reading course. The play will be repeated Friday afternoon at the Central library, children's room. Mrs. Robert I. Lanham, librarian of the Irvington branch, and Miss Helen Leoper. School 57 principal, are directing the playHouse to Probe Aurora Killing AURORA. 111.. May 12.—Friday has been set as the date for opening of the Illinois house or representa- j tives committee inquiry into the dry j raid here in which Mrs. Lillian De King was killed.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CALLES HAILED AS CONQUEROR BY MEXICANS Returns to Capital as Hero After Two Months of Fighting Rebels. By United Preen MEXICO CITY, May 13—General Plutarco Elias Calles, a conquering hero, returned to the capital Sunday after more than two months of directing federal troops against the rebels. Three military bands played the Mexican national anthem as Calles descended from the special train which brought him from Guadalajara and several thousand persons cheered the man who had crushed one of the most difficult revolts of recent years. President Emilio Portes Gil, who called Calles from retirement to the ministry of war and direction of the armies, greeted the general. Jacquin Amaro, former minister of war, and twenty-five generals besides several cabinet members also welcomed him. The President and Calles passed iby two battalions of infantry at ; present arms and were taken iraraej diately to Chapultepec castle. Representatives of the foreign office and the interior department I were expected to meet this week to discuss alleged injustices to Mexican residents of Texas and California. The press has been filled with reports that many were ordered deported by the United States. ECONOMIC CLUB PICKS CITY MEN National League Names 20 Representative Leaders. Twenty Indianapolis business and professional men today were notified of their election to the national council of the National Economic League to represent Indiana. Those named: Governor Harry G. | Leslie; Frank C. Dailey, attorney; j Judge Robert C. Baltzell; Henry H. Hornbrook, attorney; Elmer W. | Stout, banker; Charles F. Coffin Sr., I insurance; John W. Holtzman, at- | torney; Eli Lily, manufacturer; ; Judge Albert B.’ Anderson; Louis B. | Ewbank, attorney; Dick Miller, ; banker; Mayor L. Ert Slack, Boyd ! Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis .Times; Scion Carter, attorne; , Emsley W. Johnson, attorney; Arthur M. Baxter, manufacturers; Homer Elliott, attorney; J. W. Esterline, manufacturer; Clarence L. Kirk, Citizens Gas Company, and William H. Book, secretary civic affairs division of the Chamber of Commerce. The league's purpose is to create an informed and disinterested leadership for public opinion, a leadership free from partisan bias or class interest and that will be accepted as representing the best thought of the country. The executive council includes John Hays Hammond, William Allen White, Charles M. Schwab, James Rowland Angell, Lawrence Lowell, Roger W. Babson, Frank O. Lowden, David Starr Jordan, Edward A. Filene, George W. Wickersham and Nicholas Murray Butler. PERSEVERES ON DEATH Man Runs 9uto Into Tree. Cuts Throat and Jumps in River. By United Press LEBANQN. N. H.. May 13.—William R. Smiley of Providence. R. 1., i father of five children, was so eager | to end his life that he attempted ; suicide in three ways almost simul- i taneously. He succeeded. While motoring on the Lebanon- ! Honaver road Sunday, Smiley deliberately ran his automobile into ; a tree, crawled out of the wreckage ' and slashed his throat with pocket J knife and then leaped into the Connecticut river. Kills Wife, Self After Quarrel By United Press DETROIT, Mich., May 13.—After a night of quarreling over their decision to separate, Abe Levine, 55, this morning shot and killed his wife Bessie, 51, then fatally wounded himself.

Watch Your Kidneys! Irregular or Painful Eliminations Demand Prompt Attention KIDNEY disorders are too serious to ignore. It pays to heed the early signals—irregular or painful kidney eliminations; a drowsy, listless feeling; lameness, stiffness and constant backache are timely warnings. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes, use Doan’s Pills. Endorsed by users everywhere. 50,000 Users Endorse Doan's: A. X. Bussell, 712 W. Ist South St., Salt Lake City. Utah, says: “I felt stiff and Si.re all over. My back had a dull ache in it most of the time. I tired easily and was very irritable. After reading about Doan s Pills, I decided to try them. They did what i expected and now I feel tine.”

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'IRISH JOAN OF ARC HELD FOR SEDITION Mrs. Maude Mcßride Is Avowed Enemy of British Empire. By United Press DUBLIN, May 13.—Mrs. Maud Gonne Mcßride, the "Irish Joan of Arc," was held by Dublin police to- ! day on a charge of seditious libel Mrs. Mcßride, #tn avowed enemy of the British empire, is a leader of j the Irish Republican movement and is described as the stormy petrel of Irish politics. She is the widow of Captain James Mcßride, who was executed after the rebellion of Easter week, 1 1916. WARN SCHOOLS' CLERICAL HELP TO OBEY RULES Board President Declares Many Abuse Working Privileges. • Threatening to recommend disr missal of school employes disregards ing rules governing working hours established by Albert F. Walsman, recently discharged school business director, President Charles W. Kern today called attention to a state law giving the business director supervision over certain school employes. The statement was based on a recent ruling by the Indiana at-torney-general that various school department heads are entitled to appoint and discharge employes of their departments. Kern called attention to Section 6731, Burns Revised Statutes, '26, giving the superintendent power to appoint and discharge principals, supervisors, assistants and teachers, the librarian the same power over librarians and other employes, and the superintendent of buildings and ! grounds power over engineers, jani- | tors and other persons employed in ! this work, with the business director j appointing all other employes. Lead to Aouse Majority of these employes, Kern | said, were appoir.ted by high school principals, with the superintendent’s approval, or by the superintendent | himself, these appointees feeling they were accountable to no one ! other than their immediate superior, which led to grave abuses,, some schools dismissing the office force on every occasion and absenes being frequent. Walsman, he said, established a rule regulating hours of work from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. except Saturdays, when hours are from 8 a. m. to 12 noon. Other miles provided that all notices of dismissals for holidays must come from the business office, lunch periods to last only one hour, two weeks’ vacation with pay in each year and all absences of onehalf hour or more to be reported each week to the business office. Must Obey Rules The rules were issued, Kern said, when Walsman found principals were permitting clerks and stenographers, paid from SI,OOO to $2,100 a year, to leave their work in June and return in September, with various other holidays in addition, and frequent absences during the year without accounting to anyone other than the principal or department head. This was compared with the situation of teachers, who must spend part of their summer vacations in study, who are allowed only ten days sick leave each year and whose absences must be accounted for to the board offices. ‘‘As president of the board I had hoped the fairness and good sense of the rules for clerks and stenographers would make a closed incident of the matter’’ Kern said, “but it seems that the superintendent of schools does not approve of business methods.’’ ACCOUNTANTS ELECT F. S. Willett, South Bend, is the new president of the Indiana Association of Certified Public Accountants. following a meeting Saturday at the Chamber of Commerce. Other officers named are: J. C. Olive, Indianapolis, vice-president: A. R. Chapman, Indianapolis, re-elected treasurer; Harry Boggs, Indianapolis, recording secretary; H. A. Roney, Indianapolis, re-elected corresponding secretary; S. S. Yeoman, Indianapolis, and E. E. Thomas, Evansville, directors, and T. G. Thurston, Indianapolis, auditor.

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'SCOOT LEADER OF LOUISVILLE HURT IN WRECK Car Turns Over on Curve: Many Others Injured Over Week-End. Several persons who failed to observe the Golden Rule Safety motto were injured in automobile accidents over the week-end. Edward W. Craik, Louisville, is in Methodist hospital with head injuries, a broken right arm and several broken ribs, received when an automobile in which he was returni ing from Milwaukee, Wis„ to Lou is - | ville, driven by Ralph Brashear, 19, j New’ Albany, skidded and turned | over on a curve near Lebanon early | Sunday morning. Both men were lying at she side | of the road unconscious when disj covered by a passing motorist who | brought them to Indianapolis. | Brashear was able to proceed to | his home at New Aloany after his I wounds were dressed. Craik is Boy j Scout executive of the New Albany j and Jeffersonville district. Three Cars Collide James Dowden, 60, of CrawfordsI ville, was seriously injured late Sun- ! day night when the automobile in ; which he was riding crashed with I two other cars a mile and a half j of Traders Point on United States | Road No. 52. He was brought to St. Vincent’s hospital where he is reported to be suffering from two deep cuts on the head and body bruises . Dowden was riding in a car driven north by Frank McGinnis, Crawfordsville. In attempting to pass another car the McGinnis car swerved to the left of the road and collided head-on with an automobile driven by William White, 33, of 1118 South Pershing avenue, and j ricocheted into the side of another car. Mrs. White was thrown from her husband's car, but was only slightly bruised. Three Taken to Hospital Three persons were taken to city hospital Sunday night suffering from cuts and bruises following an accident at Tw r enty-ninth street and Riverside drive when an automobile driven by Jack Hogan, 115 South Highland street, collided with one driven by Law’rence Carlstedt. 2338 North Harding street, in w’hich j three other persons were riding. They were: Carl Maesey, 1427 Roach street, Frank Yager. 1333 West Twenty-fifth street and Charles Tucker, 1309 Roach street. ! Hegan w r as arrested, charged with assault and battery. Ten other persons received minor injuries in automobile crashes. SALVATION ARMY YOUNG PEOPLE END MEETING Chicago Chief Lauds Modern Youth in Address Here. / Officers of the young people’s and divisional congress of the Indianapolis Salvation Army closed their meetings today with a private business session. The annual dinner of the congress was to be held tonight at the Severin. At Sunday’s meeting in Meridian hall, 23 1 2 South Capitol avenue Colonel George H. Davis, principal of the Salvation Army training schoo at Chicago, defended youth. “They’tre not jazz mad and intent only on “whoopee.” I w r as young once myself and the young folk were just as wild then as they are now r , but they turned out all right,” he declared. Portland Y’outh Drowns By United Press PORTLAND, Ind„ May 13. Caught in a whirlpool as he endeavored to salvage an overturned i canoe, William Cunningham, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Cunningham of this city, w r as drowned in the Potomac river at Washington, D. C. He w-as a Georgetown university student..

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[lottery is proposed TO AID AGRICULTURE Norwegian Towns. Needing Funds, Also Expected to Benefit. By United Press OSLO. May 13 A $1,599,000 lot- ■ tery to aid various Norwegian j municipalities and small farmers may be started in Norway shortly, j The government has introduced a [bill into the lower house proposing I the lottery to relieve the debt bur- : dens of municipalities and small farmers caused by the increased value of Norwegian currency. CHICAGO GANGS WAR WITH 500 MACHINE GUNS State Law Providing Prison Term for Possessing of Weapons Urged. By United Pres* CHICAGO, May 13.—Frank Mcj Erlane, one of the few gangsters { who have survived early Chicago i gang war days, fumed in a jail cell ! today, while police checked up on his record, and pondered over the assertion by John Stege, deputy commissioner, that 500 machine guns are owned by Chicago gangsters. McErlane was seized Sunday after he crashed into another driver with his automobile. The gangster was carrying two pistols in his pockets and two in his automobile. He threatened violence w r hen shoved in the lockup and yelled at photographers and reporters that “it wouldn't be Frankie who paic.” The deputy commissioner said a state law is needed, making it a penitentiary’ offense for anyone, police included, to possess a machine gun. Three men have been arrested in the last w’eek, charger with selling the machine guns here. One of them V. A. Daniels, arrested Saturday, remarked that it was no trouble to get machine guns here. Stege said most of the guns here came from the Auto-Ordnance Company of New’ York. RAUH LIBRARY WILL BE DEDICATED ON MAY 21 % Donors’ Golden Wedding Anni- [ versary to be Celebrated at Eevent. The golden wedding aniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Rauh will be observed with dedication of the Rauh Memorial library, 3024 North Meridian street, May 21. Mr. and Mrs. Rauh several months ago presented their $150,000 home to the school city to replace the Illinois street branch library. The program will open at 8 p. m. with Charles W. Kern, president of the school board, presiding Rauh will make formal presentation, with acceptance by Luther L. Dickerson, librarian,, Meredith Nicholson and Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht will speak. Bronze busts of Mr. and Mrs. Rauh will be unveiled. Asks Aromatic Damages By United Press PORTLAND, Me., May 13. Claiming that an obnoxious odor from a nearby cleaning and dyeing plant made them ill, killed their cats, and ruined their foodstuffs. | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Landry have filed suit against the company, seek- ; ing $5,000 damages each.

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MAY 13, 1920

CO-ED IS ON I TRIAL AGAIN IN BANK ROBBERY Rebecca Rogers Accused of Holdup to Finance Literary Society. By f nitrd Prr*< LA GRANGE. Tex . May 13.—Rebecca Bradley Rogers, charged with i having robbed a bank to finance a j literary society, goes to trial again today. Mrs. Rogers, former University ol Texas co-ed, was sentenced to erve fourteen years in the penitentiary on conviction of robbery with firearms, but the court of criminal appeals found that the prosecutors j charge to the jury was infiammai tory. n retrial was ordered. Mrs. Rogers was arrested for robj bing the Farmers' State Bank ci Buda on Dec. 11. 1926. Previously she stood trial for arson in connection with the burning of a vacant building across the street from a bank in Round Rock. Tex. Mrs. Rogers’ husband. Otis Rogers. Amarillo attorney, will be a member of her counsel during the | new trial. Rogers, suffering from | tuberculosis, was brought into court ; on a hospital cot at the previous i trial. FEAR BOMB; FIND BONDS Bv United Press j NEW YORK. May 13.—Ah iron box believed to be a bomb, found in the men’s washroom of the Essex Market court, was placed in a bucket of water and watched apprehensively for five minutes. Then it was opened and found to contain $l,lOO in bonds and some insurance papers stolen four years ago from Israel Kashden, tailor, 630 East One Hundred and Tenth street.

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