Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1929 — Page 3
MAT 15, 1929.
CAPITOL ARGUES DISPOSITION OF MEXICAN REBEL Justice State Departments Shift Blame: Mexico Asks Return. H 7 Jr rf//< 8 -Iftj.e 'lr>l \ > *r"7;< r illiancc WASHINGTON, May 15. Whether Salvador Ateca. a Mexican • ith a little black bag containing <7.10.000. will go to Mexico "to face a firing squad" or will be given safe passage to Spain to seek legal reentry’ into the United States is a problem confronting the state and justice departments today. While officials are trying to determine what procedure to follow. Representative F. H La Guardia 'Rep.. N. Y.) has interested himself in the case. La Guardia charges that the United States has blundered and places blame on the department of justice. That department in turn says the state department was responsible for interferecence with Ateca's journey across the country. Ateca, who Is said to have been the paymaster of rebel forces in Mexico, came to rim United States eekine protection as a political icfugec. Arrested V Smuggler He crossed the border at FI Faso and informed authorities that pf was bound for Spain Russell B. Matthews, an immigration inspector was assigned to accompany Ateca to ; New York where he could board ship. At Kansas C". Ateca was arrest - ; ed. A federal charge tit a’ he tried to ship arms and airplanes into Mexico had been brought against him in El Faso, according to versions given La Guardia. Ateca put up $5,000 bail. He went on to New York only to be arrested again. In addition. Antonio Gomez ; Maquero. Ateca's secretary: Mathews. and William H. Finer of El Paso. Ateca's attorney, wore arrested. Conspiracy was charged. Has Chances to F.srapc The request for extradition came from the Mexican government. Henry L. Stimson. secretary of state said Monday. He said hearing would lie held after forty days before a United States commissioner in New York and if extradition is ordered Ateca will have recourse to the courts throught habeas corpus. In event the extradition is upheld bv the courts, the warrant w ill come to the state department for final disposition. Ateca is held in a federal detention camp in New York. Mathews and Fryer arc out on bail.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to the police as stolen belong to: Tssy Sachs. 926 Maple street. Nash coach. 64-349. from in front of 926 Maple street. Viola Jay. Rushville. Tnd.. Chrysler sport model, 276-601, from Rushville. Ind. Paul W. MrCree. Negro Y. M. C. A. Willys-Knight sedan. *l4-714. from Thirtieth street and Martindale avenue. William C. Harper, rural route 1, Box 135. Ford roadster. 86-605, from Henry and Illinois streets. L. D. Miller. 1235 Shepard street. Ford coupe. 78-193. Maryland street and Kentucky avenue. Bert Thompson. 519 South Temple avenue. Ford touring. 85-912. from in front of 302 Parkway avenue.
BACK HOMF, AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by the police belong to: Wayne McDaniels. Royal Center. Tnd.. Chevrolet roadster, found in front of 520 West Vermont street. L. D. Miller. 1235 Shepard street. Ford, found at Kentucky avenue and Georeia street. .Ford roadster, green color, no license. no certificate of title, car stripped of four tires, battery, headlights and top. found in rear of 402 West Pratt streetFord roadster, no license, no certificate of title, stripped of tires, battery, light, globes, found at New York and Cumberland streets. Twins Win All School Honors (%</ l nitni Freds HART. Mich.. May 15.—The Valedictorian and salutatorium honors of Hart high schools were won by Ruth and Ruby Van Sickle, twins. The girls are 18. Asks Death for •‘Dependent'* Dogs B’> l nitrd Press CHICAGO. May 15.—Unable to support his fourteen “dependents,'’ Carl Kunze, 72. asked police to give them a merciful death. The dependents are stray dogs.
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ALL-WOOL SOC suits And tp Made to Your Measure Leon *5254 Mass. Ave.
G & J TIRES on Liberal Pay Plan SELIGTIRE CO. 23 South East St.
Car Head Dies
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Joseph A McGowan, acting head of the Indianapolis Street Railway Company and the Terre Haute. Indiana & Eastern Traction Company, who died at his home. 2021 North Meridian street. Monday’ evening of heart disease.
CARS TO HALT FOR M'GOWAN One-Minute Pause Planne'd During Funeral. Street car and Peoples Motor Coach Company bus traffic will pause for one minute at 9 a. m. Thursday in tribute to Joseph A. McGowan, acting president of the Indianapolis Street. Railway Company and the T. H. I. & E. Traction Company, who died Monday evening at his heme, 2021 North Meridian street. The stop of one minute will be made at the hour funeral services begin in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. Fourteenth and Meridian streets. The Rt. Rev. Joseph Chartrand. bishop of the Indianapolis diocese of the Catholic church, will officiate. The body v 11 be taken to Portland, Me.. Mr. McGowan’s former home, for burial Saturday. Resolutions of regret were adopted TuesdaY'by the street railway company's Twenty Year Club, of which Mr. McGowan was a member. Active pallbearers at the funeral will be: ’Vili am J. Mooney. John Ft. Welch. Peter r. Reilly. William F. Moore. Daniel D. Rrosnan. James F. Decry. Honorary pallbearers are: Marshall Moreen. Philadelphia. Pa.: Mayor t. F.rt Slack. Dr Alfred Henry. Henry H. Horn brook. Walter J. Ball. Lafayette; William F. Milholland. James P. Trctton. Hinkle C. Hays. Sullivan: James D. Pierce. Judftr James A. Collins. Guy K. Jeffrie.. Charles \v. Chase. Gary; Frank D. Stalnaker. Pierre Goodrich. Evans Woollen. Arthur V. Brown. Frederick E. Schortemeier. Curtis H. Rottger. L. B. Andrus. Dr. Ralph Chappell. Henry Langenkamp. John C. Ruckelshaus. Carl H. Mote. John T. Beasle - and D. W. Henry. Terre Haute: C. O. Britton Fred G. Appel. Charles F Coffin. Fd’vard J. O'Reilly. P. J. Freaney. William Fox Sr . Howard Morse. Edmund H Bingham. Ferdinand Winter. John P. Frenzel. Meredith Nicholson. Henry C. Thomson. Alva F. Kitselman, Muncte; Michael E. Folev. Will H. Latta. David E. Watson. Bernhardt E. Sattler. Arthur W. Brady. Anderson: Robert M. Feustel, Ft. Wayne: John J. Madden. James P. Goodrich. Fimer W. Stout. Ross Wallace. Fred C. Dickson. Norman A. Perry. Clarence L Kirk, J. A. Van Osdol, Dr. Norman E. Jobes. John W. Atherton. Gavin L. Payne, John T. Burnett. R. H. Filbeck, G. O. Nicolai, I, T. Hixson. Thomas McGee. Kansas City; Linton A. Cox. William T. O'Connor. John D Brosnan. E. C. Mctaughlin. C. O. Britton and Charles D. Kelso.
COPS. FIREMEN CONTEST FOR CIRCUS TICKET SALE Market and City Hal) Employes Also in Competition. City officials are in a contest over the sale of Police and Firemen's Circus tickets. The fire department under Chief Harry E. Voshell sold 5.146 tickets before May 6. according to Robert Miller, safety board member, who has charge of the firemen's division. Fred W. Connell, board president, and Howard Robertson, secretary, are conducting the contest among city hall and city market employes. Ira P. Haymaker, board member, and Police Chief Claude M. Worley are directing the police activities. The annual circus will be week of May 20 at state fairground.
WIFE. DOG IN HOSPITAL; MAN SEEKS POLICE AID ; Can t Stand Expense of Keeping Roth, Wants Advice. The telephone at the police sta- ; tion jingled. A policeman answered. "I'm in a hell of a fix." said a man's voice. “I've got my wife in the city hospital and my dog in a dog hospital. I can't stand the expense of keeping both, so thought maybe you could give me some advice on what I should do." The man was informed there was no help forthcoming from the police department. INSURANCE PLOT BARED j /?;/ I ntied Pnss CHICAGO. May 15.—William C. Miller. 1301 State street, Vincennes. Ina.. arrived here Monday osten- | sibly to recover a stolen automobile but' instead he landed in jail on | charges of violating the Dyer act. Miller's arrest followed a confes- | fWWp OMrmo. he conspired with Miller to steal his automobile in Indianapolis and bring it to Chicago and destroy it, in order to collect insurance. New 5338.H00 Church Reivdy B v 7 inn a Special MUNCIE, Ind.. May 15.—A week's services to end Sunday with formal dedication are being held in the new First Baptist church here, erected at a cost of $338,000. The building is of gothic architecture. Bedford stone is the material. Dr. William G. Everson is the pastor.
DRY OPPONENT. WOMAN URGED ON LAW BOARD Bishop Asserts Group With Different Views Would Get Facts. , Hi, Scrippe-Hmrard in rspnpcr Vliance WASHINGTON. May 15—One honest outstanding opponent of prohibition" should be placed on President Herbert Hoover's law en‘crcement commission, in the opinon of Bishop James E. Cannon of he Methodist Episcopal Church 'outh. Cannon a director of the Anti--saloon League, and a strong supporter of President Hoover, said it would be impossible to get a commission composed entirely ol persons who had not expressed strong views on the prohibition subject one way or the other. The commission personnel should include at least one woman, he said, and one member “thoroughly con--1 versant with the development of prohibition and vitally interested in it." Welcomes Investigation He refused to comment on the report that Hoover had tentatively 1 -elected George W. Wickersham, i former attorney-general under President William H. Taft, as a member of the commission, and of Wickersham's reported criticism of I the Jones “five and ten" law at WilI liamsburg. Va. | “But some man of ability who is I recognized as an honest, outstanding opponent of prohibition should be on the commission," he said. “There Bill be much more thorough sifting of the facts if there are able, sincere representatives of both sides. “While in fullest sympathy with the broader purposes of the President to secure betterment in all activities in the department of justice, ! I think the country has understood | that there will be special investiga- ; tion concerning the efficient enforcement of the eighteenth amendment,’’ he said. Defends Dry Law “T think the President threw Into the scrap heap where it properly belonged much loose and baseless ac- | tion when he declared that present j day lawlessness is not fairly attribut- ; able to the eighteenth amendment. J “For forty years there has been a 1 steady increase in lawlessness. : arisin" largely from laxity- in the administration of justice, court delays and technicalities, continued ! appeals and new’ trials.’’ Embezzler Given Prison Term Bn Times Special MUNCIE, Ind.. May 15.—Oliver Collins, former official of the Improved Order of Red Men here, today is under a two to fourteen year sentence to the Indiana state prison on his plea of guilty to an embezzlement charge. He used $1,500 of i the lodge's money. He will be taken ! to prison late this week.
jgn Understanding S A Vegetable Preparationfor Assimilating the Food Understanding mothers are prepared any hour of the day to relieve those sudden ail\u ■ ments which make Baby fretful. First, do S™ TherebvPromotin?Diiestion what most doctors would advise—give a few Cheerfulness and Rest.Co&toii" drops of Fletcher's Castoria. When Baby’s neither little stomach seems sour; if his bowels are v v Mineral- N o rNARt~° T irregular; if he suffers with colic; even in the jjij I, fitcipeoro/dDrSAMUUWW* • case of dangerous diarrhea, its soothing in--I<o Sennc \ fluence is indispensable. Bigger appetite, and Y MM**?'* better assimilation and elimination almost | surely reward this sensible care. But depend \ h on g oo d old Fletcher's Castoria until your \k u' r/n'/df is grown. Keep an extra bottle on hand, h Constipalton andDiarrl* always ready for emergencies. Not one opiate \ V and Feverishness and is contained in this harmless vegetable prod\l Loss of Sleep uct. Fletcher's Castoria is obtainable at IliY. resultingfherefroTFi^J} a • every drugstore. You can know the genuine Far simile Signature by the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher on the JjStf l wrapper. ' r ||aM Children.Cru for • yjLdztuuidCASTORIA
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$2,800 Race Horse to Be Shown in Police Circus
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Mrs. R. E. Trimble Will Have Five Entries In Exhibition. Arrangements for the horse show at the state fairground, week of May 20. in connection with the second annual Police and Firemen’s circus, are being completed by Robert E. Trimble, equestrian director of the horse show. Mrs. Trimble has entered five horses in the show’. "Queen of Trumps.” $2,800 English hockney mare, will be on exhibition Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The mare will not be entered in the show’, as there will be no competition in that It will be the first time the horse has been on exhibition in the middle west. Other early entrants: Miss Dorothy Munro. 5940 Bellefontaine street: Bruce Munro. John E. Cline, 3950 Winthrop avenue; Charles J. Metzger, 3956 Winthrop avenue; Charles J. Metzger. 3956 Winthrop avenue; Charles A. Hammond, Fairground: Laura Hare. 87 West Fortythifd street: Mrs. N- E. Carter. 5501 North Delaware street, and R. H. Brown. Fairground. POLICEMAN FACES TRIAL Charged With Inefficiency and Disobedience. Charges of inefficiency and insubordination were filed against Patrolman Fred Stock by Police Chief Claude M. Worley The safety board set trial for next Tuesday. Worley charged that Stock had criticised the chief’s order for officers to work twelve hours on a parade detail. The specifications further charged that Steck’s reports frequently wore "sarcastic and itni pudent.”
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Mrs. Robert E. Trimble. Millersville road driving “Queen of Trumps," which will be on exhibition at the Police and Firemen’s circus- Below —Robert E. Trimble, equestrian director of the society horse show.
MRS. LINDBERGH VISITS Colonel's Mother Sees Son and Bride-to-Be in East. Bu V nit eel Press DETROIT, May 15.—After a visit W’ith her son in New York and Miss Anne Morrow, her prospective daughter-in-law, at Englewood, N. J., Mrs. Evangeline Lindbergh, mother of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh returned to her home here. She refused to discuss plans for Lindbergh's wedding. Woman Hurt in Crash Mrs. Ara Robbins. 28. of 1540 Lexington avenue, is recovering in city hospital from cuts and bruises received w’hen the automobile in w’hich she and her husband were riding crashed at New Jersey and New’ York streets, with one driven by Ray Broiyn. 3025 North Meridian street, Tuesday night.
INTERNATIONAL GROUP TO MEET HERE THURSDAY Mass Meeting Will Open Mid-West Foreign Institute. A mass meeting in the First Baptist church, 401 North Meridian street, Thursday night will open the first annual Midwest Institute on International Relations which will continue Friday and Saturday at the Lincoln. Dr. Charles E. Jefferson of the Broadway Tabernacle church. New York City, student of international affairs and author of a number of books on the outlawry of war, will be the speaker. The Thursday night meeting will be the only public meeting of the institute. Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, De Pauw university president, will preside. Dr. Ernest N. Evans, secretary of the Church Federation of Indianapolis, will give the invocation. Ernest Dimmick, president of the Marion County Young People’s Council, will outline the work of that organization. Harold Bredell, president of the young people’s department of the Indiana Council on International Relations, will introduce the final contestants in the “Way to Peace" contest, representing the First Friends church, Thirty-first Street Baptist church and the East Tenth Street Methodist church. Ray S. Trent, chairman of the executive committee of the Indiana Council on International Relations, will award the prizes and Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht will dismiss the meeting. Four hundred delegates are expected to attend the institute. The
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Jesse on Job But Lookout Is Careless: Police Round Up Juvenile Store Robbers.
A NEGRO boy, about 8, was perceived carefully watching a grocery early in the morning. Police Sergeant Michael Yates approached the lad. “What you looking for?" demanded the law. “I’m a lookout for Jesse," an- j swered the boy. “Jesse who?" asked the law. “Jesse James.' answered the boy. “I'm a sergeant, too, and as soon as I give the signal we are going to rob that grocery." * “Where is Jesse?" asked the law. , “Over in that barn," answered the boy. Sergeant Yates went to the abandoned barn and there found Jesse in the shape of a Negro boy about 15, surrounded by five of his lieutenants. In questioning the youth it was discovered they had broken into the Henry keltzman grocery. Fisher and Tenth streets, three times last w’eek. AIL were taken to the detention home. program includes addresses and round table discussions on problems of national and international moment. Friday evening a banquet in the Travertine room of the Lincoln wall be followed by an address by j Dr. Shailer Mathew's of Chicago university, on “Remaking Public Opinion.” Daughter Stumbles, Father Shot Bu l nited Press DETROIT. May 15.—Patrolman Zina D. Myers, 40, was cleaning his revolver. His 4-year-old daughter stumbled against his foot, the revolver accidentally discharged and a slug entered Myers's chest. He will recover.
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POSTOFFICE TO RE FEATURE OF CITY AIR SHOW Young Men of Indianapolis Lay Ambitious Plans for Exposition. , A miniature postoffice will be established at the Indianapolis air show, May 27 to June 2, at the state fairground, Postmaster Robert H. Bryson announced today. The postoffice will have a booth for sale of stamps and a collection box for air mail letters at the show’. A feature of the air show’ will be a series of stunts to be given over the fairground several days during the show by Freddy Lund, chief test pilot for the Advance Aircraft Corporation. Troy, 0., with a Waco sport biplane. Lund recently entertained the large crowd attending the air demonstration at Schoen field. Members of Young Men of Indianapolis, sponsors of the show, will meet at Monument Circle at noon Thursday for the first of a group of motion pictures. The films will be shown to visitors atteending the air show, in an at- | tempt to “sell Indianapolis" to them. I Scenes will include Indianapolis I citizens who own and operate their • own planes and views of prominent ! aviators landing here for the show. The Amazon river is 3.400 miles long and is 150 miles wide at its mouth.
Kndori*d by HOOK DREG and AM. LEADING DRUGGISTS
A Group of JM . 49 Kayon Pillows Hose. Orchid, (b nine. > Icncl. V m and JL 'la ire Large sires, good assortment. Ton’ll want several.
