Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 61, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1929 — Page 13
JTLY 22. 1020
SNOOK FACES MURDER TRIAL ON WEDNESDAY Sanity Hearing Demand Is Withdrawn by Lawyers for Professor. f t I „ >4 P>< COLUMBUS. O July 22—The tr o* Dr Jsmr. H. Snook, former Ohio Slate university professor actu ed of murder formally was set for 9 a m on Wednesday. Snook's attorneys appeared before Jndee Her.i v Scarlett and withdrew t.ii-ir request for an insanity hearing. The trial immediately was or-b<-red lot Wednesday on a charge of fii t d'-srrrr murder Snook, agrd 43. former professor e. veterina; y medicine at Ohio State univci lty. R accused of the murder t>; Theora K. Hix 24-ycar-old rtuden; in tiie college of medicine with whom hr had carried on n clande ’ir.e association for three year On Saturday it was announced that the plan to force a sanity hearing preceding the murder trial had been abandoned by the defense. K. O. Ricketts, chief of defense rounsel. and John F. Seidel, associated with him, emphatically denied any plan to have their client plead ruilty to a general charge of homicide and throw himself upon the mercy of the court. Self-defense and emotional insanity will be the basic pica of the defense, it was indicated. Snook's lawyers are expected !o attempt to show that Miss Hix gamed such a dominance over Pnook that he came to fear her and that, it was the constant conflict going on within him, caused by Miss Hix and her alleged demands upon him. which broke in a storm of emotional insanity during which the murder was done. GIRL. 17. SETS RECORD FOR MANHATTAN SWIM Aouatie Star Paddle* Around Island in Less Than Twelve Hour*. $•/ I nit rtf Pie's NEW YORK. July 2.—Miss Lillian Garrick. 17. of 115 West Seventieth street, today held the womens record for swimming around Manhattan Island. .Plie accomplished the feat Sunday In 11 hours 26 minutes, breaking the women's record set. three years ago by Mrs. Lottie Schommcl by 2 hours 45 minutes. Miss Garrick is the third woman to swim around the island, the first bring Mrs. Clemington Corson, who in 1921 made the circuit in 15 hours 57 minutes. Mis; Garrick of the Iramar pool claims records for women in swimming from Yonkers to the Battery, the Battery to Station Island, and New Rochelle to Sands Point and back. CORNER STONE IS LAID FOR ST. JOHN’S CHURCH New Edifice Will Cost $125,900 When Completed. The cornerstone for the new St. Johns Evangelical church at Leonard and Sanders street, to cost $123,000 ai its completion by January. wa laid Sunday afternoon. The Re . Mr. W. A. Schcer of St. Matthew:.. Ky.. spoke to approximately right hundred persons. The Re\. Mr. Ernest A. Peipcnbrock, pastor, conducted the corner stone services. Hie Rev Mr. Robert C. Kuebler. pa-tor rs the Fricdcns Evangelical church and the Rev. Mr. Frederick R Da l ies, pastor of the Zion Evangelical church and Dr. Ernest N. Evans, assisted. CITY TO STOP RUBBISH DUMPING IN SEWERS Citirens .Vlted to Not Put Grass, l*u< in Gnttrr. Citizens today were asked to cooperate in keeping -ewers open by not dumping leaves and litter into gutters. * We have started a general campaign against dumping of rubbish in city sewers. Much of our trouble is caused by thoughtless persons who put the crass in the gutter after they cut their lawn." Street Commissioner Charles A. Grossart said. lie who throwh litter into the sowers invited trouble for himself or -011100110 else. Indianapolis sewers have but little fall and consequently run sluggishly. Violators are liabic to prosecution and a S3O flne The department hopes to eliminate 75 per cent of the trouble through the anti-htter campaign. MARDI GRAS FRIDAY Ir-lir. >lack Will Speak at Shcr-man-Emerson Celebration. Mayor L F.rt Slack and Governor Harry G. Leslie will speak at the Sherman-Emerson Civic League mardi gras Friday and Saturday on East Tenth street between Riley and Linwood avenues. Program wall start Friday at 6 p. m. Governor Leslie will be introduced by Arch Hindi, master of ceremonies on "Indiana night." Albert Ncuerberg will preside at the 'city night" program Saturday, w hen Mayor Slack will speak. CHURCH CLASS PICNICS Minute Men Spend -Week-End at Idlcwold Resort. The Minute Men. Inc., young men's class of the First Baptist Bible school, spent Saturday and Sunday at an outdoor picnic at Idlewold. near Pendleton Baseball, swimming, boating and golf featured the outing. A hill side Sunday school followed breakfast Sunday morning, and a fried chicken dinner at noon was served to approximately fifty guests.
NOME PLANE WRECKED BY CRASH IN CANADA
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These pictures show Captain Ross G. Hoyt, army aviator, and the Curtiss Hawk pursuit plane in which he crashed in his flight, from Nome to New York.
HOSPITAL AID ASKED Aviation Increases Need. Says Schortemeier. While Indianapolis citizens arc becoming air-minded they must not become forgetful of the existing demand for adequate hospitalization facilities, m the opinion of Frederick E. Schortemeier, Indianapolis attorney and former secretary of state. Schortemeier is a member of the citizens committee of sponsors for the, $300,000 drive of the Indiana Christian hospital. "It is the desire of everybody today that, Indianapolis become an aviation center and wc arc concentrating our efforts toward that end,” Schortemeier asserted. "Such development will undoubtedly benefit the city a great deal, but we must remember that coexistent with industrial growth which brings additional population there is an increasing demand for hospitalization facilities. "I have watched the growth of the Indiana Christian hospital for more than a quarter of a century. I am fully convinced that it is doing a noble work and deserves the support, of everybody.” GASOLINE FIRE MAKES MAN A LIVING TORCH Motorist Believed Dying in Hospital al Kcndallville. A';/ I niteil Press KENDALLVILLE. Ind.. July 22. Converted into a human torch when a container odt gasoline exploded, Henry Voclker, 54, is near death in a hospital today. While returning from a filling station, where he obtained the gasoline after his automobile's supply becam exhausted. Voclkcr placed tire container under his feet. Without warning it exploded, enveloping him in flames. Willis Witsaman, 25. with whom Voclker was riding, also was burned. He leaped from the machine before it crashed into a telephone pole and rolled in the grass to extinguish the blaze in his clothes. Voclker, a mass of flames, stepped from the automobile and a filling attendant, turned a fire extinguisher on him. SPANIARDS ACCLAIM U. S. BULL FIGHTER Rr<*nklyn Man Kilts Animal With One Stroke. A-/ I „ fat Press SAN SABESTIAN. Spain. July 22. —Sydney Franklin of Brooklyn, who has won considerable publicity in Spain as a bull fighter, was carried from the ring here Sunday on the shoulders of a cheering mob. Franklin's performance today w as a most courageous one and killed his bull with a single stroke. He dedicated the bull to Commander Raymon Franco, noted Spanish flier, and the beauty queen of Guipuzcao province.
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New York-to-Alaska Round Trip Flight Halted by Accident. A.7 7 nilftl Press EDMONTON. Alberta. July 22. j The scheduled round-trip flight of Captain Ross G. Hoyt. United States ; army flier. New York to Nome, Alaska, ended in a crash at Varmount. British Columbia, near here, late Sunday. Hoyt appeared fatigued when he j arrived here by motor from Var- j mount and he made no statement of future 'plans. Althought the flier was uninjured in the crash his plane , was wrecked. Captain Hoyt left, Mitchell Field, ; L. 1., Thursday morning and ex- j pectcd to return there late today.! Lack of fuel forced him down at Vandcrhoff, British Columbia, late j Friday. After refueling he continued on, reached Alaskan territory, flew to Nome and began the return flight w ithin an hour. The crash occurred while Hoyt was on route from White Horse, a refueling stop in the Yukon, to Edmonton. The trip was made to determine the efficiency and speed with which a plane could travel over the northwest frantier. DIES ON PAL’S GRAVE CHICAGO. July 22.—Owen McMahon, 55. died of heart attack as hc placed a flower on the grave of his old friend. Miachel O'Brien. McMahon, l'o ryears a roomer in the O'Brien home, stayed on as a lodger there after O'Brien's death a few weeks ago. Sunday he and the widow went out, to the cemetery. Owen was planting a geranium in the plot when he fell dead. HAY FEVER AND ASTHMA TREATMENT ON FREE TRIAL D. J. Lane, a druggist at 1413 Lane Building. St. Mary's. Kan., manufactures a treatment for Asthma and Hay Fever in which he has so much confidence that he sends a $1.25 bottle by mail to anyone who will write him for it. His offer is that he is to be paid for this bottle after you are completely satisfied and the one taking the treatment to be the judge. Send your name and address today, stating which trouble you have.—Advertisement.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
OLD RELIC EXPLODES One Killed in Cog Railway Ceremonies. MT. WASHINGTON. N. H., July 22.—When "Old Pcppcrsass." the first engine ever to climb a mountain, rolled off a trestle on Jacob's ladder. Mt. Washington, during ceremonies Saturday to celebrate the anniversary of the cog railway, it exploded and killed Daniel P. Rossitcr, Arlington, Mass., a newspaper man. Three others were injured. Twenty persons, including three govenors, were marooned on the mountain top waiting for the old locomotive, whiih was to carry them down, and many made perilous descents on foot.
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SERVICE ... .... . LOUISVILLE STARTING July li the Interstate Public Service Company again resumed a complete and DIRECT passenger service between Indianapolis and Louisville. ith the completion of tiie new railroad bridge the Interstate is now able to render a better and morp efficient service than ever before. ou ma' go direct from the Fraction lermina! in Indianapolis right to the center of Louis> iilc. <?a' ins ' ou time and placing ' ou in the heart of the business district. SEVEN all-steel trains daily, including Par-lor-Buffet-Dining Car service three times a day. INTERSTATE PUBLIC SERVICE CC. Traction Terminal Phone Riley foOl
SMALL STILLS NOW SUPPLY LIQUOR STOCKS Prohibition Bureau Finds Bootleggers Divide Sources to Prevent Seizures. Bff ffcrippt-Hoicard V< ctpav r lllinuct WASHINGTON. July 22. The day of the giant still for manufacture of moonshine liquor is passing, it is indicated by statistics at the prohibition bureau. Instead liquor is being manufactured in smaller quantities scattered over wider territory. In earlier prohibition days large; stills and larger concentrations of liquor were seized than in the last year or two, prohibition official, said. Officials in tlac bureau attribute i his to scattering of bootleg stocks and manufactures in older to make seizures more difficult and to prevent a bcotlcggcr losing his entire source of supply in a . ingle raid. The larger bootleggers arc now found to operate groups of stills and to cache their bootleg liquor in more than one concentration point. The Jones five-and-ten law is not held responsible because the same trend was true in the year ending June 30. 1928, before the Jones law was adopted. Incomplete figures for the fiscal year of 1929 show the ! scattering of stocks ancl the rcduc-
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ing of the size of the stills to be even more marked. In 1928 the stills seized totaled 18.980. The figure for 1929 is said to be larger and the total amount of liquor seized much greater than the i.048.636 gallons taken in 1928.
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PAGE 13
THINGS A COOK SHOIM KNOW Let These Cookery Secrets Make Foods Taste Better Sugar may be described ai Lb# partly understood food. Everyone knows that sweets are valuable energy foods, but sugar's supreme service to good cookery is as a flavorer. Add a dasb of sugar to cereal while it is being cooked and you will discover whal seems to be an entirely new flavor. Flavors of cereal are very delicate. The dash of sugar develops them so that they can be tasted. A little sugar brings out the natural flavors of fruits when stewed, making them delicious. A little sugar softens the fruit acids of the citrus fruits and of berries. Sugar demonstrates its supreme condimental power when a da.-h of it is added to vegetables when they are cooking (preferably in little water). This use of sugar makes these essentia! foods delightful to the taste. Small amounts of sugar added to chopped beef, pot-roasts, stews, ragouts and other inexpensive dishes makes the finished product richer in flavor and more appetizing in appearance. A little sugar distinctly improves both the flavor and color of almost every sauce or gravy served with meat, especially if made from the juices of the meat. Think of sugar as a flavorer. Use it to make the balanced meal enjoyable to eat. Good food promotes good health. The Sugar Institute.
“1 PRAISE NEW KONJOLA FOR IT ENDED MY ILLS” Indianapolis Man, Service Station Operator, Declares He Should Have Had Konjola First. "I should have had Konjola long ago; it would have saved me a world of suffering and expense.” Often that expression is heard from those happy men and women who have found in Konjola. the new and different medicine, the medicine they should hate had in the first place.
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MR, JASON A. HOOIEN rhoto by jN?.tional Studio, Illinois Bldg. ' There is no secret, no magic, no : mystery about, Konjola. It is a ! scientifically blended remedy ot 32 ingredients, 22 of which air the ! juices of roots and herbs of known : medicinal worth. Each of these in--1 gradients has a mission to perform in relieving the ills ot the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and rheumatism, neuritis and nervousness. But learn the whole story of Kon- ■ .iola; hear its remarkable, history, as 'it wins success after success, | triumph upon triumph over cases i that have resisted and defied every medicine and treatment tried. Meet the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where daily he is explaining Konjola and its merits tcrall who come to find out what Konjola lias done. After all, sufferers arc entitled to all the facts about the medicine in which they put their money, their faith and their hope for health. Profit by the experiences of others. Think over the experience of Mr. Jason A. Hootcn, operator of the Hooten Service Station, 3901 Orchard avenue, Indianapolis. Just a few days ago. repoicing over his newly found health, he said to the Konjola Man: ”1 should have had Konjola long ago: it would have saved me a world of expense and suffering. For a long time I endured miseries from stomach trouble. In fact. I was in poor health for twenty years. My food simply refused to digest and formed a heavy mass in the pit of my stomach. Gas formed in such large Quantities that I became short winded and had wild heart palpitation. I was so weak and nervous that I had to lie down three or four times a day. Nervousness resulted and constipation made matters a great deal worse. Lif? was just a constant round of suffering. ■'A friend told me about Konjola and said that this was the .medicine for me. I surely hoped lor relief, but had little faith in finding it in Konjola, or any medicine. In fact, I was disgusted with/tnedicincs and treatments. But Konjola surely proved to be a different medicine. Just as I was told it would do, Konjola went quickiy to the seat of my troubles. Constipation was speedily relieved; my digestion improved and my appetite returned Konjola soothed and quieted my nerves and in five weeks I was like a different man. I have gained eight pounds, have more energy and strength and have been built up in general. That is why I praise Konjola.” So it goes—the same splendid story of success wherever Konjola is given the chance to prove its merits. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store. Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is meeting the public daily, introducing and explaining the merits of this meriicjar -AavwUMMagk
