Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 219, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1930 — Page 2

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CANDIDATES GET IN RACE EARLY FOR MAY VOTES Aspirants to Congress and County Office Seekers A nounce. Many candidates who will seek nomination at the May primary election are announcing their aspirations throughout Indiana, ranging from those who wish reats in congress to seekers for township Offices. Among candidates for membership In the house of representatives is John W. Boehne Jr., Evansville. He ! Is a son of a former Evansville j mayor who also was a representative in congress. Oscar Lanphar, Evans- . ville attorney, has announced in opposition to Boehne. Both are Democrats. A labor plank and one for flood control will be in Lanphar’s ; platform. Sherman Minton, New Albany lawyer, seeks the Third district congressional nomination at the hands of the Democrats. He is a World war veteran. He was graduated from Indiana university law school, winning a scholarship at Yale. Democrats Organize Madison county Democrats, enthused by their parly’s victory in j the Andersen city election, are or- , ganizing to put up a real fight for the various county offices. A county club was organized at a meeting attended by 500 persons. Judge Lawrence V. Mays, Repub- , llcan, announces he will be a can- ; didate for re-election to the Madi- j son superior court bench with a strong probability that he will be unopposed for the nomination. Democrats mentioned as likely candidates are Charles E. Smith, Bartlett H. Campbell and Alfred Ellison. The sheriff's office is proving especially attractive. Republicans who are certain to be in the race include Arthur Daniels, former sheriff, and William A. McMinn, Republican county chairman. Democrats entered are J. Wesley Stewart, Ander- j son; Charles Brown, Elwood, and Harry Gossett, Summitville. Oswald Ryan, Republican prosecuting attorney who will seek re- i selection probably will have no oppoiition. Democrats likely to enter | a,rs Cecil F. Whitehead, Anderson; j Jatoies H. Edwards. Alexandria, and George B. MrCammon, Elwood. Mark O'Neill, Anderson, seeks the Democratic nomination for recorder ! and Edward H. Lewis, assessor, will j seek the Republican nomination. Deputy Would Be Auditor Charles M. Taylor, deputy auditor, I Is seeking the Republican nomination for auditor. John T. Rock is • likely Democratic candidate. Ralph Ferguson, Elwood. Democrat, is a candidate for clerk. Marcia H. Barton,* treasurer for two years, will not seek re-election. Thomas McCullough and Walter Jones, Anderson, probably will be Democratic candidates for the office she holds. Announcements of candidates for j Johnson county offices are being : made rapidly. Democrats in the race for the recorder nomination include Mrs. Della McClain Blaich, j mother of eight children; Mrs. Rachel H. Dugan, mother of four; O. A. Calvert; Hal W. LeMasters and Mrs. Mabel C. Ragsdale. Mrs. Zelia K. Webb, recorder for eight years, is a candidate for auditor, as is Floyd Cutsinger. Jabez Kinnick is a candidate for assessor. In Clay county, Bert Eppert, Bra*ll, is a Democratic candidate for sheriff; George W. Baumgartner, Republican, seeks rencmination as the Republican candidate for treasurer; Vincent E. Oswalt, Brazil, Republican, seeks the auditor nomination, and Albert Miller, the Democratic nomination for assessor. Woman Announces Mrs. Mabel B. Ringo, Muncie, is the first woman candidate to an- I nounce in Delaware county. She j seeks the Republican nomination for clerk. She has had six years j experience in the office as a deputy, j Joda Newsom and John L. Bon- j ham are Republican candidates for auditor of Bartholomew county; > Chester M. Dinkins for clerk, Phi- [ neas Guinn, assessor; Miss Mina i Sullivan and Mrs. W. W. Lambert, j recorder, and L. H. Wright, treas- j urer. Sheriff Alonzo E. Fitch, can- ! didate for re-electicn. is unopposed Bo far. Democrats announcing include J. W. Baldwin and J. W. I Foust for sheriff. Henry B. Heller, an attorney at 1 Decatur thirty-two years, is a Democratic candidate for judge of Adams circuit court. SHEET METAL GROUP PICKS ELKHART MAN Virgil Roland Elected President at Annual Convention. Virgil Rcland of Elkhart was elected president of the Sheet Meta! •nd Warm Air Heating Contractors’ • Association of Indiana and the Indiana Fur-Mets, at the eleventh annual convention at the Denison today. Other officer? elected were: H. A. Beaman of Indianapolis, vice-presi-dent; Oscar Voorhees of Indianapolis, second vice-pre ident; Th:mas i Ewing of Huntingt:n, treaurer; Homer Selch of Indianapolis, corporation secretary; Paul Jordan, executive secretary, and Frank E. Anderson of Terre Haute, Charles Gatz of Gary, Elmer Livetey of Newcastle and J ohnßalxema of Lafayette, directors. Ralph R. Reader of Indianapolis was elected governor of the association irom th s district. Several addresses were made at today's session and the convention will close with a banquet at the Chamber of Commerce Thursday Bight. Spanish Students Strike By United Press MADRID. Jan. 22.—A strike of approximately 5,000 students in the schools of law, medicine, philosophy and letters was started today. Many windows were broken in disturbances that marked the beginning of the •trike, _

HIKER NEAR CLOSE OF LONG JOURNEY

South Bend Youth, Walking Home From New York, Stops in City. An old adage, “The spirit of youth conquers,” was evident in the story lof a cross-country hiker, Paul Dulmatch, 2D, son of Mrs. P. E. Dulmatch of South Bend, and Notr* Dame college student, who stopped at The T.mes office today before resuming the last leg of a “rideless” hike from New Yorx to San rrancisco. Since he left New York on Dec. 10, he has walked 807 miles, averaging 32 miles a day, and haw hiked every step of the way. His adventure, which he expects to help him in a journalistic career, almost ended in failure Jan. 4, at Lewisville, forty-seven miles east of Ind.anapolis. An infected foot, caused by a blister, forced him to take a Pus to this city, where he has been undergoing treatment since that date. But Paul had determined to walk all the way. so Monday he went tack to Lewisville, and hiked the distance to Indianapolis. Today he headed west and expects to stop at universities, cities and towns along the way, picking up “local color.” “I’m going to accept rides from now on,” he said. “Winter hiking is hard, but it's a good time to talk with people along the way. They are not so busy.” He decided to make the trip while attending the Notre DameArmy game in New York last November. When he arrives in Gan Francisco he expects to take a boat for i

ILLEGAL ‘ Wife ’ Finds She Warn't Married

BY SHELDON KEY, TWO years of happy “married life” ended in sadness today for Lola Tinder when the law intervened to inform her she never has been married at all. While she sat in a scantily furnished upstairs room at 905 North New Jersey street, weeping over “a romance that seemed so real,” the “husband,” Forest Hull, 30, was at police headquarters trying to explain a fake marriage license and answer to charges of deserting a wife and four children in Celina, O. Hull was arrested Tuesday night and is wanted by the sheriff of Mercer county, Ohio, for neglect of Mrs. Maggie Hull and four children —Rosemary, 9; Donald, 7; Billy, 5, and Richard, 3.

GITY DESPONDS TO FLOOO PLEA Red Cross Appeal for Aid Brings Donations. Swelled by collection of radio stations WKBF and WFBM and contributions to headquarters, a Red Cross fund for relief of southern j Indiana flood sufferers was rising rapidly today. Appeals were broadcast over WKBF Tuesday night by Walter D. Hickman, dramatic critic of The j Indianapolis Times, and Mallott Fletcher, cashier of the Indiana National bank, representing Frank D. Stalnaker, local Red Cross chairman, who was out of the city. Charley Davis’ Indiana theater band broadcast a special relief fund program, request numbers being played for $25 each. The radio station today turned over to the Red Cross $2,012 received Tuesday night. Red Cross headquarters at the War Memorial building, 777 North Meridian street, at noon today had received a total of $1,832.50, of which SI,OOO was dispatched Tuesday afternoon for emergency relief. WFBM will sponsor a relief fund program tonight. REFUSES DRY POST S. P. McNaught Declines Job Offered by Indiana. Refusal of Samuel P. McNaught to accept the superintendency of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League resulted today in consideration of plans by the league s headquarters committee for a meeting to discuss anew candidate fer the post. . Upcn his return to Indianapolis from the league meeting at Detroit, Dr. C. H. Winder, temporary superintendent of the Indiana league, said a meeting would be called on a date suitable for Dr. F. Scott Mcßride of Washington, national superintendent, who wi’l nominate some cne for the position. McNaught’s refusal of the superintendency was made known here in : a telegram received by Bishop H. H. ; Fout. president of the Indiana league, from Mcßride. McNaught is superintendent of the lowa league. FIRE ROUTS FAMILY Defective Flue Results in Damage of S4OO. Fire, caused by a defective flue, which damaged their home S4OO. drove three members of a family into the cold morning air early to--1 day. Charles G. Pugh, 68. of 4026 East j Tenth street, was awakened by smoke, and aroused his wife. Mrs. May Pugh, 65. and their son. Charles Jr.. 17. The trio swathed themselves in blankets and ran from the house. They spent the remainder of the night at a neighbor’s home. Short circuit of an engine wire caused an automobile fire as Frank j Harret, 1535 North Chester street, j drove his car into his garage early today. Damage to the auto and garage was S3OO.

| dr •'Vf'v : ’ v ,v*-

Paul Dulmatcb the Orient for more experience. Later he will return to Notre Dame to complete his studies.

“We met at the Sheridan skating rink while I was attending business college two years ago, and I thought we were legally married, just like other people, when we got our license in Anderson, September, 1928,” she sobbed in her room today. “I was 18. “We just kept putting off going to a minister. Forest said it was all right and I believed him—l loved him so.” u u * LOLA was living with an aunt in Indianapolis at the time. “My aunt wanted me to finish my business course, but Forest treated me so nice that when we told my aunt we were married she thought everything was all right,” she sadly explained. “He was a good husband, and worked hard, and I never guessed,” she said. “We were planning to buy new furniture and move into a better home soon.” Lola’s relatives believed in P’orest. To them he seemed honest. Ke paid his debts; had lots of friends. Christmas Hull went back to Ohio for a visit. Lola believed him when he told her he was going to see his parents. “I guess he went to see his children,” she lamented today. Hull, in his cell at police headquarters awaiting return to Ohio, told a different story. He declared the girl knew he was married and that they obtained the marriage license “simply to protect her wtih her folks.” “I fell for her and she fell for me,” he declared. “We met at Sheridan and we simply got a marriage license to protect her. Her folks believed her married to me. but she knew we did not go through with the ceremony.” He has been employed in Indianapolis about four years as an automobile mechanic, working at a number of garages here. He declared his wife deserted him and says he heard through a friend that she had obtained a divorce.

NEW TRIAL IS ASKED State Contests Ruling on; Insurance Policies. Motion for anew trial of an in- j junction suit of the Automobile \ Underwriters’ Inc., against a ruling of State Insurance Commissioner i Clarence Wysong, prohibit ng issuance cf nonassessable policies, was j filed today before Superior Judge Linn E, Hay. Hay, ruling recently on the suit, held that the sale of such policies was in conformity with the law, and issued the injunction, preventing enforcement of the order. New trial motion contends Hay’s ruling was not sustained by evidence in the case, and that the decision is contrary to the law. t. Attorneys filing the motion were James M. Ogden, attorney-general, Joseph W. Hutchison and Earl B Stroup. Counsel for the Automobile Underwriters was given thirty days in which to file a bill of exceptions. FRANKLIN TRIBUTE PAID Sixty printers at a dinner of the Old-Time Printers’ Association on Tuesday night in the Severin heard their famous fellow-craftsman, Benjamin Franklin, eulogized by Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht, who pleaded America’s return to the simple tenets of Poor Richard. Meredith Nicholson, author, presented the printers with a menu of a Franklin dinner in 1853, printed by his uncle, William M. Meredith, Indianapolis pioneer.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AUTHOR OF DRY LAW MAY LOSE ; STATE POSITION Frank Wright on Probation for Part in Stock Sales Scheme. Representative Frank (Bone Dry) Wright today was reprimanded severely by Secretary of State Otto G. Fifield. and was placed on probation as auditor of the >

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mission in Fifield c ‘office. He admitted having been “duped into becoming trustee of the now defunct Indiana Real Estate Se c u rities Company, 41G-19 Continental Bank building. His position with the commission and a letter he wrote to President Carcllyr. E. Crump of the company was used

Frank Wright

to boost stock sales, Investigators allege. Crump Is in Marion county jail awaiting trial for securities law violations. He and Mark W. Bemis, co-promoter with Crump, were arrested upon Indictments brought by the grand jury upon advice of Mart W. Rhoads, state securities commissioner, and Earl Coble, chief examiner, who checked the company’s activities after some $3,800 worth of alleged worthless stock had been sold. Received no Money Wright received no money as trustee, but says he lost SIOO by cashing a tad check for the company promoters. He declared he knew nothing of the allegations now made that the stock was traded for whisky in some instances. Wright is author of the “bone dry” law bearing his name and drafted at the instance of the Indiana Anti- Salocn League, for which he made many speeches. Fifield announced the action or. Wright at a conference today with Rhcads, Coble, Clarence Fate, securities investigator and newspaper men. “It is a rule that no one connected with the securities commission shall make recommendations or accept positions with promotion Or investment companies,” Fifield declared. Violated Rule “Wright has violated that rule. I have investigated personally and found that he is innocent of actual wrong-doing, but is gullible and had been duped, as were others in Indianapolis by these Chicago men. “In his position as auditor he has nothing to do with passing on any securities, but is merely a bookkeeper in charge of fees and the like. His books are passed upon by the board of accounts. “He has been given a warning and placed on probation. Should he let himself be used again, even innocently as this was, he will be discharged.” Rhoads and Coble explained the many weeks’ work spent in tracking down Crump and others connected with the company. Their securities were licensed here on a fraudulent set-up, it was alleged. Crump faces charges which would bring a maximum sentence of ten years and a $6,000 fine, Coble declared.

SHAW GUILTY, JURY VERDICT Leniency Recommended in Holdup Case. A criminal court jury today returned a verdict of guilty on a grand larceny charge against Herbert Shaw, alleged member of a bandit gang that held up the manager of the Terminal lunchroom, traction building, more than five years ago. The jury recommended leniency. Conviction on grand larceny charges carries a sentence of from one to fourteen years in state prison or reformatory, and a SI,OOO fine. Shaw will be sentenced by Special Judge Harvey Grabill Saturday. Shaw, who was charged with auto banditry, robbery and grand larceny, based his defense on the ground that the statute of limitations is applicable in his case, contending he did not absent himself from the state nor make any effort to conceal himself. Harold Stein, confessed member of the bandit gang, now serving a reformatory sentence for robbery, testified that Shaw was not with him at the time of the holdup. Shaw admitted he accompanied Stein to the scene of the robbery, but denied that he participated. Closing arguments were made for the state by Deputy Prosecutors Paul Rhoadarmer and William R. Ringer. JOSEPH WILSON NEW ASPHALT PLANT HEAD Succeeds Howard Dehart in City Post; Other Changes Made. The city board of public works this afternoon named Joseph Wilson of 347 M East Washington street, superintendent of the city asphalt plant, succeeding Howard Deahrt. Other changes made in the staff of the city engineer, on recommendation of Engineer A. H. Moore, were: Raymond Farrell of 465 Goodland avenue, junior field aid, succeeding Thomas Judd. S. H. Ryan of 3774 Sales street, I assistant city engineer, succeeding | L J. Matlock, who was demoted to I senior field aid. H. H. McGuire of 533 East Thirj ty-second street, appointed junior j aid, succeeding Albert Zins, who was made assistant street commissioner.

MELLON EVADES DRY LAW STAND IN HOUSE QUIZ Secretary Says Treasury Department Has Done Its Best. Bv T'nitrd Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—The treasury department has conscientiously made very effort to carry out the responsibilities of prohibition enforcement during the last ten ears, Secretary’ of Treasury Mellon .old the house expenditures committee today. Declining to express his personal views about prohibition, or whether It has had a fair test, the secretary indorsed the pending Williamson bill proposing to transfer enforcement activities to the justice department. It was somewhat of a “swan song” for the aged treasury head as regards prohibition enforcement, which he has directed for nearly nine years and which will be taken from his hands when the bill Ls enacted, which is expected. Evades Quiz Adroitly Mellon has never been regarded by drys as in strong sympathy with the prohibition laws, which has brought numerous attacks upon him, but he declined, adroitly, today to enter into controversy about the wisdom of the law. Mellon said he thought the enforcement task logically belong to the law enforcement agency of the government. He thought the industrial alcohol unit did not logically belong to ei:her department, but until a better place is found for it, he said it should be left in the treasury. It was after he had read his statement expressing his views about the legislation, that Representative Igoe, Republican, sought to get Mellon to express an opinion about prohibition. Commissioner Doran who followed Mellon to the stand, also endorsed the legislation brought forward by President Hoovers law enforcement commission. Doran Lauds Treasury “It will enable the prosecuting agency of the government to have charge of cases from the beginning,” he said. The commissioner said he did not know of any cases in which the justice department had failed to give the treasury full co-operation. I know what they are up against over there,” he said. Doran denied Representative Schaefer’s contention that the two departments had split over the “whisky ring” i nthe state of Washington. The commission said he had not received any report on the Washington case from the justice departmen tand said the Washington commissioner had been removed | for “administrative reasons.” The quetsion of making public the alcohol permit users of the Chicago district in the alst two years and the amount of withdrawals of more than 200 gallons a year, will be j taken up by the committee tomor- j row in executive session. At that time the committee will decide how far it will go into the prohibition question. The appearance of Mellon and Doran was the only out-standing prohibition development of the day at the Capitol.

Gratitude Wife Tires of Working to Send Erring Husband to College.

Bu United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 22.—For nine years Mrs. Alta Eastman read proof in newspaper offices so her husband, Homer, could go through high school and college and make a success of himself, and then he left her for other women, Mrs. Eastman charged when she applied to Judge Davia Sabath for separate maintenance and nominal alimony. "I don’t begrudge a cent of the SB,OOO I spent,” Mrs. Eastman told Judge Sabath. “Nor do I regret the automobiles, nor the $75 suits and overcoats I bought so he could live well and be well dressed while he went through high school and the Universities of Illinois and North Dakota.” She asked nominal alimony "as a matter of justice for the $8,000.” Judge Sabath awarded her $1 a day until the suit is heard. "I’d probably be fool enough to take him back if he would promise to mend his ways,” she said. JIM DAHLMAN DIES Omaha’s Mayor for 18 Years Passes on Vacation. Bu United Press EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, Mo., Jan. 22.—Jim Dahlman, who quelled Black Hills cattle rustlers with sixshooters and ruled Omaha as mayor for eighteen years, is dead. Paralysis Tuesday night cut short Dahlman’s ambition for an eighth term, while he and his wife took their yearly vacation at this health resort in the hills of eastern Missouri. The stroke ended a 73-year career of a man who started life on the Texas plains, spent several years as a peace officer in the Black Hills, and ended with eighteen years in the mayoralty chair of Omaha. Dahlman spent his early youth in Texas, but grew to manhood in the Black Hills, then known as the “toughest country in the northwest.” 54-Year-Old Beard Gone Bv United Press SHERIDAN. Ind.. Jan. 22. Michael Blessing, Sheridan, had his first shave in fifty-four years. The 83-year-old Civil war veteran shaved off a beard he has worn since he was 29.

Dry Stand Personal Pledge of Senator Borah

EDITOR S NOTE—In order to throw ! additional light upon the prohibition | controversy, in which congress now is i engaged, the United Press oilers the | first of a series of sketches of the lead- | ing figures in that contest. BY PAUL R. MALL ON I n’.cd Press Sl'ff tO.rr.jxsr .it j WASHINGTON. Jan. 22.—The ! strongest thing Senator Borah of ; Idaho ever crank is iri k. The dominating dry personality at he Capitol aM the leader in the

present prohibition controversy is a graduate of the old school of the west, where hefty cowboys planked their silver dollars on Idaho bars and called for drinks for the house. Despite the surround ngs of his caqiy legal career, Bcrah, in his boyhood, placed coffee and tea along-

side liquor on his list of banned beverages and never broke his personal pledge to himself. Strangely enough, in view of his strong persenal habits, he never has belonged to a temperance or dry organization. He never has been interested very strongly in preventing other people from drinking and he never in bus life made a ‘ prohibition speech’ Eorah’s interest in prohibition has been constitutional strictly. Although he supported the eighteenth amendment, he voted against the Volstead act on the ground that certain features of it would lead to invasion cf homes and breakdown cf other sections of the Constitution. It is only in the last two years, by a peculiar force of circumslances, that he has come to be looked upon as one of the custanding dry spokesmen. He never has manifested much interest in the moral side of the question. It was only when he felt that law enforcement was breaking down and that disrespect

MANUAL STUDENTS ARE GIVEN HONORS

Honors day awards for the first semester were made at Emmerich Manual Training high school today by E. H. Kemper McComb, principal. McComb instituted the awards in 1920. Honorable mention is given all students with an average of 87.5 or above, and special mention is made of the thirty boys and thirty girls with highest averages. “Top Ten” buttons are awarded the twenty highest at the end of each semester. John Holliday Jr. Foundation departmental awards are apportioned for use in scholarship promotion. Frenzel medals are derived from the income of a memorial set up by the late Otto Frenzel for his son Paul, who died while a student at Manual. The awards: "Top Ten” White House—lrvin Lambert, Harold Maass, Charles Stalwood, Charles Ayres, Alex Burris, Gilbert Shepherd, Harry McGary, Donald Moore, Saul Fogle, Richard Brier, Richard Anderson, Carl Johnson, Paul Lindemann. Herbert Neidenberger, Frederick Wahl, Robert Lee Danzig, Anna Calderon, Anna Mary Koehrlng, Elizabeth Brouhard, Beatrice perdue, Rachel Cohen, Elizabeth Merrick, Margaret Borgmann, June Kempf, Lucille Wagener, Thelma Buescher, Clara Allee, Ruby Shanks. Eileen Davis, Nora May Nichols, Florence Eorgmann, Teena Postma, Louise Welland, Irma Seitz. Red House—Noble Burkhart, Wilbur Harris, Robert Montgomery, Joe Calderon, William Marney, Merle Faublon, Carl Kagenmaier, John Click, Abe Yosha. Philip Fogle, William Covert, Kenneth Grow, Milo Haines, James Duncan, Fred Kattau, Henry Zumkeller, William Swails, James Carter, Marthajane Zlntel, Mary Hayes, Ethel Jenkins, Mary Stlerwalt, Harriet Barrick, Clara Glickert, Merle Williams, Lena Wright, Katie Reiser. Mary Anna Seele, Mary Dancy, Rebecca Cohen, Elizabeth Bissell, Dorothy Miller, Marie Grossman, Margaret Bade. John H. Holliday Foundation Departmental Prizes—English department. June Kempf: commercial department, Abe Brodsky: Honorable mention, Irma Seitz. Esther Mae Pyles. Shop and mechanical drawing department, Wayne Mendell, Malcolm Creasser. Physical education department (Girls). Martha Jane Zintei. He'en Sanford: Honorable mention. FINE FOR TORPID LIVER If lota of appetite, nervoutnett, constipation or bilioutnett warn you of trouble take DioxoL Overnight Relief or your money back It’a a grave mistake to take drugs for the relief of torpid liver. For generations—and until recent years—it was believed that old-fash-ioned cathartics helped the liver. But the result was generally the reverse. The intestines became irritated. Then a condition known as catharsis was produced. A grave mistake—now corrected! As the guardian of health, the liver’s main duty is to supply the intestines with about a quart of bile each day. This bile checks germ growth. When it is scant germs thrive. They form disease-breeding poisons. The modern authentic treatment for stimulating the liver, thus helping to incerese the bile flow to normal, is the secretion drawn from the liver of the ox—ox-gall. Relief, or Your Money Back Now ox-gall comes in pleasant tablet form. It is called Dioxol. In each Dioxol tablet there are ten drops of the genuine extract from the liver of the ox. If your liver is bothering you, if it is sluggish, start taking Dioxol. I Benefits in a day. If you are not completely satisfied with the relief Dioxol gives, send the empty box to the makers and your money will |be refunded without question. Get 1 Dioxol from your druggist—today. —Advertisement.

j for the Constituilcn was going f3r beyend the prohibition issue, that jhe storied making the speeches | which have established him in the unofficial leadership of the drys. It was his sensational charge aga’nst the enforcement personnel | during the Christmas holidays which I led to the rerent reports cf the ; law enforcement commission and | the revival of prohibition enforcement as a major issue. CASE ON LAND DAMAGES MAY BE TRIED AGAIN Rehearing on County Suit to Be Asked by Tax Association. Retrial of a $15,000 damage suit i against Marion county by the Col- ! lege Hills Realty Corporation, ! brought as result of the widening of College avenue, will be asked in a ! petition of the Indiana Taxpayers’ ! Association, Harry Miese, secretary, ! indicated today. Trial of the case two weeks ago by Superior Judge William O. Dunlavy resulted in a finding for the realty corporation of $13,000 damages, although to date Dunlavy has not approved the judgment. Meanwhile, it is understood, various interests have been scruntinizing the trial record with the knowledge that Clinton H. Givan, county attorney, tried the case after a formal admission that the realty corporation had been damaged. The retrial, it was pointed out, will demand a review of the testimony on which Dunlavy’s decision was made, with particular stress laid on the assessed valuation of the ' five-acre tract.

Borah

Fannie Gereteln. Mary Whiteman. Leona Anderson, Edna Mason, Frenzel Medals Physical Education Department (Boys)— Charles Yager. Cecil Wyant. Alvin Hue’oner. Robert Maschmcyer. Cassel Thrasher, Henry Hasse, Sterling Hill, Frank Welton, Ronald Whitman, Kurtz Whitaker, Scholarships Indianapolis Foundation —Irma Anderson, Thomas Rasmussen (Butler); Dorothy Bluemel (Earlham): Virginia Harris (Ball Teachers’ College); William Winter (Wabash). John Herron Art School Saturday Morning Scholarships—May Nell Anderson, Mildred Jasper, Grace Kramer. Jane Whitsett. CHAMBER CREDITED Saved City 10 Millions, McWhirter Estimates. Totaling the stuns saved and brought to Indianapolis through efforts of the Chamber of Commerce, Felix M. McWhirter, general chairman of the Indianapolis Forward movement, today issued a statement crediting the chamber with making or saving Indianapolis $10,335,200 during the last year. He listed $6,000,009 as added directly to pay rolls and capital investments of the city through new industries obtained by the industrial commission. A otal of $3,875,200 was saved taxpayers through reduction of the city tax budget by efforts of the civic affairs bureau, he declares; $240,000 was added to the city’s foreign trade through the chamber’s bureau for this purpose and $220,000 was saved to shippers through operations of the traffic division.

COMFAMV Jj tijej Sit down in a cozy sun parlor Cincinnati on and travel to the next town, dayton *3.20 columb’uj mm or clear across the continent UMA canton.,..'.";; s^s in one of the Greyhound Line EVANSVILLE $4.95 buses. They’re warm, cheerful, and ever so comfortable. , V ° R Economical, too. Frequent waxhinstqn... 15.00 Philadelphia;, ie.oo schedules, courteous drivers. DETROIT $6.00 Write Greyhound Travel Bu* TOLEM *5.00 clevelano w.oo reau, 1157 S. Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO $4.00 Chicago, for travel, literature, OMAHA Minneapolis , .uxk or inquire at depot. KiniTv ST '.. LOU,S * 5,00 H ****** *ITY... |l 000 101 AN6ELEJ...152.00 GREYHOUND STATION -JO" Traction Terminal Bus Station $32.25 Hllnoi* and Market S4. ' 22 “ ®*LANDO. .'.*;. *27 .28 Phone Lincoln 2222 palai beach. .. 30.75 tampa 28.25

JAN. 22, 1930

‘PUNISH LIQUOR BUYER,' IS PLES GF DR. WILSON Noted Dry Makes Address to Pasters: Bishop in Unity Ta ! k. “Punish Mister Rich Man, the buyer of liquor, as you punish the seller.” “Church unity may come through a federation of churches and bv leaving each creed to its own work.” These two pertinent statements were made, respectively, today at the closing sessions of the Indiana pastors’ conference in the First Baptist church by Dr. Clarence True Wilson, general secretary of the Methodist church’s board of temperance and Bishop Francis J. McConnell, president of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ. Talks on Best Plan Dr. Wilson’s plea for punishment of booze buyers was made in an address on “The Best Plan for Making Prohibition Effective,” while Bishop McConnell’s church unity expression came in an explanation of moves toward that unity. At the afternoon session Bishop McConnell closed the meeting with a second address dealing with pres-ent-day tendencies toward mysticism in religion. In citing the needs for effective prohibition Dr. Wilson named the following; “1. Education of the younger generation in temperance through pledge cards, rallies and lectures. “2. Support of the Sheppard amendment in congress, making the buyer of liquor equally guilty with the seller. Heavy First Penalty '3. Making first offenses in violation of the Volstead act carry a prison sentence. “4. Deportation of all aliens who come to America and disobey the prohibition law. “5. Stringent padlocking of property used for the violation of the prohibitory acts. “6. Election of public officials who are in sympathy with the law.” Dr. Wilson praised the Hoover administration and its attempt to enforce the prohibition law. He termed it the first administration actually to seek enforcement. He scored A1 Smith, the Raskobs and the Duponts, and urged that the society matron who buys from a bootlegger should be placed in a cell alongside of him. Cites Dry Creed “Our creed is; Mental suasion for the man who thinks; moral suasion for the man who drinks; legal suasion for the drunkard-maker; and prison suasion for the statutebreaker,” he said. In oiscussing the possibility of church unity, Bishop McConnel said: “It must come without coercion and from the free response of churches and people. We must preserve the things of merit in all denominations. We can’t have a heaven with every one in wanting out, and in the same fashion, we can’t have church unity without the response and desire of the church and church members.” Although he forecast opposition on the part of some members of the council he represents, he asserted that unity would be through a federa’lsm similar to the government of the United States, with each church keeping its entity as the states. RADIO EXPERT TO SPEAK Miss Irene Wright, women’s radio institute expert, who will talk over station WFT3M at 10:30 Thursday morning, will visit the floor covering department of the Fair Store, 311 West Washington street, from 2:30 to 4 Thursday afternoon. She will answer fashion and beauty questions during her visit to the store. Her visit is sponsored by makers of Gold Seal Congoleum rugs and linoleums.