Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1929 — Page 12
PAGE 12
RUDE ADDRESS WINS HONOR AT 'RED'JIESSION Textile Worker. Accused in Police Chief Murder, Goes on Air. BY HARRY FERGUSON I'niUd Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—Five hours Sunday, the Communist doctrine came spilling in song and story out of 10,000 throats, but when all the noise was over, Red Hendricks of Piney Creek. N. C. had captured the stiow with a stumbling speech that lasted two minutes. Madison Square Garden, accusas it is to the turmoil of u. cu.-s, r<xleo and tli prize ring, never housed so bizarre a gathering and no pugilist, flushed with gore and victory, ever felt such a rush and roar of roof-spliting cheers as went out for Hendricks. He had journeyed from the Charlotte jail, where his comrades were taken after being convicted of shooting a police chief, and his face was as white as Mrs. Bonnie Neal said it was on the night he stormed into her home, shouting: ‘Aderholt’s b?cn shot." Hendricks glared at the microphone; he had stage iright. because •inadventently he was being forced to compete with speakers wise in the wiles of oratory. “I ain’t no speaker and never was,” Hendricks said. "I ain't never been scored for myself or expected anything but what all workers get—the worst of it. “But I come up here for to plead hard with you to help and help quick, ’cause our comrades down there in Mecklenburg county jail in Charlotte are in danger such as I hope to God you never get to know. "The only reason I’m here is ’cause my bail is lowest and I come hoping and thinking hard to make you know how bad it is with them all. They salute you. comrades. They ask your help.” FRENCH ENVOY IS DEAD Ambassador to Brlgium T>ies in Paris After Heart Attack. fill I />/-, PARIS, Nov. 4.—Maurice Herbette, French ambassador to Belgium, died of a heart attack at the Claridge hotel todav. He was 58 years old. He was the son of Jules Herbette, former French ambassador to Berlin and was a commander in the Legion of Honor. He served as an attache to the French embassy in Berlin before being appointed to the Brussels post. Divorce Ends Film Romance ftu I nitf<l /•. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 4.—A romance which began w hen they were being filmed in "The Volga Boatman” has ended with the granting of a divorce to Elinor Fair from William Boyd. Mrs. Boyd charged her husband with cruelty. An average of 3,000,000 persons are ill every day in the United States.
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Special Football Train Saturday, Nov. 9th $4.30 Uirbana Champaign $4.20 And Return And Return Half Fare for Children 5 and Under 12 Years. Account lllinois-Army Football Game PULLMAN CARS—COACHES Special train will leave Indianapolis 9:30 a. m.; returning leave Champaign 7:00 p. m., Urbana 7:10 p. m. Tickets at City Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circle, phone Riley 3322, and Union Station, phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
Wreckage of Auto Where Nine Died
Ail that remained of an automobile in which nine members of one family lost their lives when it was struck by a train at Osceola is shown here. Mr. and Mrs. John Platt of Newcastle, their 17-yeai-old daughter and a number of relatives met instant death when a New York Central passenger tram crashed into their auto at a grade crossing. The bodies were strewn along the right-of-way for 100 feet.
ARRANGE UNIQUE RADIO PROGRAM Thanksgiving Day Event to Offer World’s Music. l!v United Press NEW YORK, Nov. 4.— A two-hour broadcast of selections by some of the greatest musical organizations will be heard throughout the nation Thanksgiving day, representatives of the General Baking Company announced today. The feature will mark anew departure in the nation-wide distribution of a radio program, for all of the European selections have been recorded electrically in a portable sound-proof studio which was transported about Europe. Deems Taylor, American composer, will announce the program. Represented on the broadcast will be the Garde Republicaine band of France, the Scots Guards’ band, the Irish Guards’ band, the Royal Air Force band, Buda Peth Gypsy orchestra, the Lascala opera orchestra and others. Sousa’s band has made a special recording, with w’hich to represent America. Two months were required for collecting the records. RAIL ENGINEER BURIED Funeral Services Are Held for Clyde A. Hadley. Funeral services were held at 2 p. m. today for Clyde A. Hadley, 46, of 215 North Oakland avenue, railway engineer, who died Saturday at Methodist hospital. Burial was in Washington Park cemetery.
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DUST OFF MEMORY, WIN A CASH PRIZE
Remember Charlie Murray and His Plays? Sure You Do. Movie fans have had many contests in the past, but none will prove quote so popular and fascinating as the Times-Lyric Charlie Murray contest, starting Tuesday. Twenty-five dollars in cash prizes and twenty-five pairs of tickets to the Lyric will be awarded to the winners of this contest. Here’s how: Starting Tuesday and continuing for five consecutive days The Times will publish a "still” from one of Charlie Murray’s previous First National feature comedy successes. Then it’s up to you readers to put your thinking caps on and try to name the picture. It’s not hard. All of these pictures have been shown on the screens of Indianapolis theaters in the last few years and we are sure most of our readers have seen all of them, or most of them at least. The contest is open to every one
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ekeept employes of the Lyric and uimts ana the film exchanges and theaters of this city. All you are required to do is to clip out the pictue, fill in the title of the picture you think it represents, sign your name and address and, when you have the entire set of five, send them to the Charlie Murray, Contest Editor of The Indianapolis Times. The deadline for sending your photos in has been set for midnight Tuesday, Nov. 12. Prize winners are to be announced Thursday, Nov. 14. The reason for this contest is J >~+ Murray, one of the screen’s best beloved comedians is ...... u ig u> .aiuianapolis, in a personal appearance at the Lyric, starting Saturday, Nov. 9. Inasmuch as Charlie Murray is a native Hoosier, having been born in Muncie, where most of his family now lives, Murray is desirous of finding out just how many of his Hoosier friends remember his former screen comedy hits. Wait for the first picture in The Times Tuesday.
D. A. R. IS TDLD CONFESSIDN IS GOODFDRSOUL Pastor Urges Organization to Repent Evil of Its Stand.
Bit United Press BOSTON, Nov. 4.—The D. A. R. “is trying to set itself up as one of the sacred cows of America,” Dr. William L. Stidger, pastor of the Copley Methodist-Episcopal church, declared in anew attack on the patriotic organization from his pulpit Sunday. ‘‘They sent for a blacklist condemning a large group of the finest' minds in the United ‘States,” he said. “Then they sent forth a dis- ! reputable book called ‘Pastors, Faei- | fists and Preachers,’ a book condemned by every intelligent person who has read it. "The D. A. R. no longer can get by through dodging the issue. Let it confess its sins, confess that it issued these blacklists, admit that it was wrong, and win back the respect of the nation. The issue no longer can be dodged. The nation is peaceminded. It is thinking in larger | terms than this organization.” Dr. Stidger declared that Arm'.s- ---! tice day "will be a good day for thin j organization frankly to admit the j blacklist and go so far, at least, as I the steel corporations of America i did in the Shearer case—admit that they were fooled, admit that they did a stupid thing—and go on from there.”
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Corsets Next Bit f nitrd Prrxt CHICAGO, Nov. 4. Chicago's police force has been put on a diet. No longer can Nora tempt her blue-coated friend with corned beef and cabbage, or pie, or cream puffs. Word has gone around that 200 pounds is the limit and that officers who do not reduce'their waist lines in a hurry will be dropped from service. To make matters worse, each member of the force has been given a complete seven-day diet schedule which allows but a scant 1,800 calories a day. Belt line examinations will be held every ten days.
ASSASSIN IS HUNTED Missouri Farmer Is Killed and Wife Is Hurt Seriously. Bn United Pr< as INDEPENDENCE, Mo., Nov. 4. An assailant, who killed Albeit Weddle, middle-aged farmer, 0 and I wounded his wife, probably fatally, | oy firing through a window of their I home near here Sunday night was j sought in hills of Jackson county today. Two shotgun shells, found outside the window, furnished the only clew. Mrs. Weddle knew of no enemies, she said.
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SEEK TWO STUDENTS Michigan U. Men to Face Bootleg Charge.
Bit United Press ANN ARBOR. Mich.. Nov. 4. Police sought two University of
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Michigan students today with warrants charging they operated a bootlegging establishment in the men’s dormitory of the college. #
In a raid on building, it was said, a case of wine and whisky was discovered, while numerous telephone orders for liquor were intercepted on a private line. Five fraternities on the campus recently were placed on probation.
