Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 209, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1930 — Page 12
PAGE 12
GALA CEREMONY HONORING ROYAL COUPLE CLOSES Italy’s Bridal Pair Will Start on Honeymoon; Children March. BY THOMAS B. MORGAN' l'attd Pres Staff Corre^pondrnt ROME, Jan. 10.—A final day of dasilng ceremony, bringing to a climax the marriage celebration of Crown Prince Humbert and Princess Marie Jose, and the royal couple will be free to begin their honeymoon Saturday in the historic chateau on Raccomgi, where the prince was born. Thirty thousand children from the elementary schools of Rome added their acclamation to the demonstration of their elders today when they assembled in the Piazz.i Di Siena and marched past the prince and princess with tumultous cheers for, the couple. King Victor Emanuel and King Albert, with their wives, motored privately to Ciampino in the morning to inspect the military airdrome, and then proceeded to the civil airport, where detachments of military aviators saluted them Departure of the title guests, who lent dignity and glory to the nuptia’s. began today, and the Belgia * royal family was scheduled to say gcod-by to Marie Jose and leave for Brussels after tonight's gala performance in the opera house. Rome’s celebration reached its height last night in a historical pageant. As guests of the city of Rome and Its governor. Prince Francesco Bon-compagni-Ludovisi. the prince and princess of Piedmont, with the royal families of the two nations and their guests, were driven in Court Berlins to view the spectacle from the capitol palaces. The guests were met by Premier Benito Mussolini, who welcomed the royal party. LAW'S RECORDS GONE New Probaton Officer at South Bend Finds Clean Slate. SOUTH BEND. Ind., Jan. 10.— No records were found in the office that Frank O. Hogan, new probat;on officer, assumed Thursday, and h? is at a lass what to do with cases which were pending at the time he took office. Luther J. Lane, retiring probation officer, explained that when he entered the office there were no records of past cases. He thought that wasn't a bad idea, so he decided to leave his successor a clean slate. Suit Accuses Minister iJ>/ United I‘rexx BLOOMINGTON. Ind., Jan. 10.— Charles Littrell, said to be a minister, is named by William Burch, stone mason, as the man who ran away with Burch’s wife. Burch has filed suit for divorce, asking custody of two children. Publisher Dies Bn United Prrxx MICHIGAN CITY, Ind.. Jan. 10.— Funeral services were held Thursday for Charles Robb, Michigan City newspaper publisher and former postmaster, who died Tuesday following a year’s illness.
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Paris couturiers, please notice! In these dressy days of novel bathing costumes, pretty Princess Ueana of Rumania contributes her bit to the mode. Here you see the youngest daughter of the Dowager Queen Marie wading, bare-footed and in peasant dress, in a lake at the queen’s Baltic estate on the Black sea. One-piece bathing suits apparently haven’t won royal favor —or maybe the water wasn’t deep enough.
BULLETS RIDDLE AUTO Car Theft at Lafayette Apparently Machine Gun Target. Bn United Prrxx LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 10.—A bullet-riddled auto left in a garage here led officers to believe hijackers and rum runners engaged in a gun battle near Wolcott. Two men drove the auto, a Gra-ham-Paige sedan, with 1929 Indiana license plates 308-712, into the garage and told attendants to “put it in a stall for a couple of days.” The men explained a car with four men crowded their machine to the side of the road near Wolcott and its occupants started shooting.
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Glass in the front of the car here is shattered. It appears that a machine gun had been used. Stormy Career Ends Bu Timex Snrciat _ , MUNCIE, Ind., Jan. 10.—Delaware county’s highway superintendency is in new hands today after four stormy years. The county commissioners named Robey Hirons, farmer, to succeed Owen D. Helvie, Daleville, whose term expired. Helvie was arrested for intoxication and driving while intoxicated at Elwood two years ago and held incompetent by commissioners to hold his job. It w T as declared vacant, but despite the action Helvie remained. He was later acquitted of criminal charges.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HOUSE WETS START FIGHT AMONG SELVES Contest Over ftadership Diverts Attention From Campaign. BY KENNETH G. CRAWFORD United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 10.—A contest over nominal leadership of the house wet bloc diverted its members today from their campaign to force President Hoover’s law enforcement commission into the open. The commission adjourned Thursday until Feb. 5, after two and a half days of executive sessions without taking any public notice of demands made in the house for a report on its work. The wets immediately started squabbling among themselves. At a meeting of the unofficial house committee for modification of the Volstead law-, Representative Laguardia (Rep., N. Y.) and Shafer (Rep., Wis.), two of the most enthusiastic of the wet group, undertook to displace Representative Linthicum (Dem., Md.) as chairman by suggesting Representative Beck (Rep., P.) as his successor. New York Tammany Democrats, who apparently had feared Laguardia would try to get the place for himself, insisted upon re-election of Linthicum. Asa compromise, it was decided the present executive com-
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mittee should nominate a leader for the next year. While both sides were busy campaigning, the resolution of Representative Black (Dem., N. Y.), calling upon the law enforcement commission to hold public hearings and submit to congress immediately a report on its proceedings to date, was referred to the rules committee. where it is expected to remain indefinitely. Love Suit Asks 53,000 PV Timex BveHal YORKTOWN, Ind., Jan. 10.—Cliff Applegate is defendant in a suit asking $5,000 and alleging alienations of affections, filed by Cecil Girton, near Muncie. The suit, filed in the Delaware circuit court, charges Applegate persuaded Girton’s wife, Aita, to attend dances with him and finally to desert Girton.
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GAS EXPLOSION HOCKS DISTRICT; 17AREINJURED Overheating of Tanks and Compressed Air Are Biamed for Blast. Bn X nited Prrxx PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 10.—Overheating of five tanks of gas and compressed air was blamed today for the series of explosions during a fire in the old Globe theater building, which rocked the business dis-
trict and caused Injury to seventeen persons. The explosion, which came at the height of the evening rush hour Thursday shattered hundreds of windows in the vicinity and hurled heavy timbers down on the homegoing crowds. Three of those injured. Carl Hallowed of Collinswood, N. J.. a worker; Charles Raisnor. policeman, and Frank C. Brady, fireman, are in critical condition at the Hahnemann hospital, with severe body burns. Two persons, members of a crew of workers demolishing the old theater building, were missing, but police said they may have suffered from fright and probably would be located. The explosion, according to Hal-
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lowell’s story to director of public safety Lemuel B. Schofield, occurred after a spark from a blow torch Ignited Hallowell’s gasoline-soaked clothes and subsequently fired some shavings near the gas and compressed air tanks. Mother of Six Dies vn Timex Special CENTERVILLE, Ind., Jan. 10.— Mrs. Ruth Crowe, 84, Is dead near here. She was the widow of Ashford Crowe. She leaves three daughters, Mrs. Levi M. Bennett, Mrs. Bernard Geiser, and Mrs. Robert Haas; three sons, Omar, Ernest and Roy Crowe, and ten grandchildren.
