Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1930 — Page 9

Second Section

NATIONAL RUM LAWS BRANDED AS MONSTROU' Attorney at. South Bend Urges Action by Newton D. Baker. MENACE TO DEMOCRACY ‘No Criminal Like a Fool Legislator,’ Letter Declares. Hu 7 imes Spuria I SOUTH BEND. Ind., Feb. 18.— Federal prohibition laws are a monstrosity, Samuel B. Pettengill, South Bend attorney, declares in a letter to Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, a member of the Wickersham committee which is studying prohibition. Pettengill asserts a belief the time j is ripe for a clear cut statement on liquor laws by a man of Baker’s caliber. He suggests Baker has it in his power to make the most states-man-like utterance of our generation.'' In part, rhe Pettengill letter is as follows: “Needless to say, while I concede the right of local legislatures to prohibit traffic in intoxicating liquors, I nevertheless consider federal prohibition as a monstrosity. It marks a clear departure from the cardinal principle of an ‘indestructible union of sovereign states.’ “The local resiliency which has successfully absorbed the growing pains of a growing people for a century and a quarter is abandoned for a universal rigidity in which 120,000,000 of people must all lie in the same Procrustean bed. It violates the fundamental principle of all law regulating personal conduct, that it j must be dynamic, not static, capable : of change as men change, as experience ripens. ‘All things flow\’ Suggests Modified Plan “The most that should have been done, if anything, would have been to grant congress power to legislate with respect to interstate and foreign commerce in liquor, leaving the manufacture and intra-state com- j merce to the several states. “Law Is public opinion. Brand Whitlock defined it as ‘whatever the. j public will back up,’ and this is as good a definition of law, under gov- \ ernment by the people, as has ever | been put in words. And law having j a local application, is whatever local j juries, prosecuting attorneys, judges, j sheriffs will back up. Anything else, • under our democratic theory, is of ; the nature of tyranny , National • prohibition, therefore, whenever it I comes in conflict with local public l opinion, is a denial of democracy. AU Law Endangered “It is not impossible that the report of your commission will profoundly affect social life on the continent throughout this century. An , examination into the wisdom of ; federal prohibition comes clearly [ within the purview of the great end | you were appointed to promote— j respect for law. Nothing does more j to cause disrespect for law than j laws which do not command re- | spect. In comparison. 'Scofflaws,' | hi-jackers, bribery, unlawful enforcement of laws, are but mere j trifles. There is no criminal equal to a fool legislator. “Laws creating new crimes are of | necessity new criminal markers, j Ten years ago it was said that federal prohibition would empty the. jails. Today our penitentiaries ate crowded to the point of mutiny. If we continue in our ignorance and fanaticism to make new’ crimes it, will not be long before we shall have a nation composed of criminals. or the relatives of criminals. “The legislation presently proposed in congress to make the users j of liquor criminals, will place within that category perhaps a majority of \ the entire nation, certainly an over- ■ whelming majority in many of the | largest states of the Union. When i has blindness been so blind? ‘O, ! judgment, thou are fled to brutish beasts, and men have lost their reason.’ All Decency at Stake “Respect for law’ is not the only thing involved. Respect for the principles of representative democracy, for the traditions of our great past, are not alone Involved. A nation of criminals and actual or potential convict* means that respect for blood, for family, for one's ancestry - and posterity, for all those strong compulsions which cause one to try to keep clean the name given him by his father, are all at stake. “Let us leave something to the heme, to the school, to the church. Let us leave something to conscience and to God! I mean this. Before we dragoon men's bodies, let us first convince their souls.’ . “You have it in your power (If necessarv in a minority report' to make the most statesmanlike utterance of our generation." lEDERWOLF ANNOUNCES Supreme and Appellate Court Reporter Seeks Re-Election. R'i Initfd Press FT. WAYNE. Ind.. Feb 18 Charles L. Biederwolf. Ft. Wayne. ; announces his candidacy for the: Republican renomination for clerk of the Indiana supreme and appellate courts: subject to the May primary election. Biederwolf was elected in 1926. and took office Jan. 1. 1927. During the last presidential cam- j paign Biederwolf was vice-chairman of the Republican state finance committee In charge of the ways and means committee. He was chairman of the Governor Harry G. I Leslie Inauguration committee.

Full leased Wire Service of the United Press Association

Wampas Star to Wed

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Ethlyne Claire. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 18.—Ethlyne Claire, 22, a Wampas baby film star, and Ernest Westmore, 27, makeup artist at the motion picture studio, will be married here Friday. The couple filed notice of intention to wed Monday.

SEARCH MARSH for eors BOOT Murdered Child Declared Buried Near Creek. Bu United Press WOOSTER, 0., Feb. 18.-r-Search for the body of Melvin Horst, 4, missing from his home in Orville, since Dec. 27, 1928, was resumed today when officials went to a spot on Sugar creek, southwest of here, where they now believe the body is buried. Charles Hanna, 68, who “broke down” Monday under a long grilling and blamed the murder and burial of the body on Earl Conoid. 42. railroader, was taken along with the party and was asked to point out the isolated spot on the banks of the creek where he now claims the body can be found. Hanna’s latest statement concerning the location of Melvin's bcciy caused officials to abandon excavation work in the rear of Hanna , former home in Orrville after the entire yard had been torn up. Monday Hanna said the body would be found there, but later designated the Sugar creek burial place. Conoid’s attorneys have instituted habeas corpus proceedings to obtain his release from Wayne county prison. Conoid has maintained firm denial of any knowledge of the crime despite Hanna’s repeated charges that he brutally choked the boy and then buried his body. Professor Seeks Office Bu i nitrd Press BLOOMINGTON. Ind.. Feb. 18.— Professor Walter E. Treanor, Indiana university law school faculty member, has announced his candidacy for judge of the Indiana, supreme court, on the Democratic ticket. Professor Treanor. graduate of the university law school, has been active in Democratic politics several years.

BOWERS WILL SEEK DATA ON BEVERIDGE

E.u Tin i> s SpeiHai GREENCASTLE. Ind., Feb. 18.— Claud G. Bowers of New York City, author and keynote speaker of the 1928 Democratic national convention and former Indiana editor, will visit the De Pauw’ university campus in May for a stay of several days, during which he will gather data on the late Albert J. Beveridge, former United States senator. Bowers is engaged in writing a book on the late senator and expects during his visit to De Pauw r to accumulate considerable college lore about Mr. Beveridge, who was a De Pauw alumnus. A member of the present freshman class is Al-

A THRILLER OF THE SKIES IS THE TIMES NEXT GREAT SERIAL

Ij'OG. sleet, wind, blizzard, darkness in a cruel, frozen land —then, crash, head-on, into a mountain of ice. A crew of gallant, fearless r.dventurers marooned at the south pole. The love of two brave men for a woman, who is married to one and loves the other. These are only a few high lights in the great serial which will start Thursday in the Noon edition of The Indianapolis Timfs, running only in the street editions of this newspaper—the Noon and the Pinks. It's “The Lost Zeppelin,” one of the big thrillers of the year, and it will hold you enthralled from the opening words until the author writes “The End.” “The Lost Zeppelin" deals with the trip of a huge dirigible to the frozen Antarctic, where it is wrecked in a blizzard. Through the amazing adventures runs the powerful love story

The Indianapolis Times

Hawk Lynched pu Times Special EVANSVILLE. Ind., Feb. 18. —A group of Evansville citizens held a lynching party to avenge death of a redbird killed by a hawk. The redbird was a neighborhood favorite and after its death a number of men searched for the killer. The hawk w’as found and executed by Dr. J. R. Mitchell.

MUNCIE MAYOR ASSAILS 10GGE Occupant of City Bench Declared ‘Unfit.’ pu 'l imes Si ■ ' ini MUNCTE, Ind.. Feb. 18.—Acquittal by City Judge Frank Mann of a defendant accused of being drunk brought severe condemnation of the court from Mayor George Dale. The acquitted man, Mannford Sunday, was arrested in a poolroom. “Judge Mann preferred to take the evidence of hangers-on at that place to that of police officers," the mayor declared. “He insulted the board of safety by remarking that it should appoint police officers in whom he had more confidence. Frank Mann was dragged through the campaign on the tail of my political kite. I regard him not only as an ingrate, but as a man who is unfit for the job he accidentally obtained." Dead Man Fails In Water CENTER. Ind., Feb. 18.—Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Abanson Church, 71, w’ho fell into a cistern after suffering an attack of heart disease at his home near here. Physicians said he was dead before the fall, a post mortem having revealed the lungs free of water.

bert J. Beveridge Jr., son of the late senator. Bow’ers will address a chapel service during his stay and efforts are being made to hold a joint meeting of all journalLstic organizations on the campus to hear Bow’ers on a professional subject. The fraternity would include Sigma Delta Chi, national journalistic fraternity: Theta Sigma Phi, national journalistic sorority: the De Pauw Press Club and Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity. The political science deportment has also expressed keen interest in Bowers’ visit.and he probably will be asked to make an address before the group.

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in which the wife of the Zep;>elm commander and his chief lieu-

INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1930

WEST SUERS DEFEND CITY FIREFIGHTERS Charges That Department Is Inefficient Called Unfounded. BOARD HEARS VOSHELL Gamewell Chief Also Gives Testimony at Safety Group Meeting. Charges of inefficiency in Indianapolis’ fire department, made in a series of stories by Dick Miller, in The Indianapolis Times, are un-

founded, a delegation of west side business men contended before the board of safety today. The board, after j hearing Fire Chief Harry Voshell and William B. Griffis Gamewell system superintendent, and protests of the two j men, took unde: j advisement the rec- j ommendations f o r | retirement of W. B. Tall entire and

Frank Sloan, veteran Gamewell operator, “No one, except this reporter, who probably owns no property and probably doesn’t pay city taxes, is making charges against the fire department,” said Harry F. Gompf, 1 secretary-treasurer of the Lindeman Wood-Finish Company, fEditor’s Note —Mr. Miller lives at 335 | North Mount street, and pays taxes on ' his home and personal property.] J. W. Stickney, Fletcher American Company insurance adviser and chairman of the Chamber of Com--'

merce fire prevention committee, said hLs committee could find no basis for the charges. There is no threat j of an insurance rate raise here, he declared. “The matter of this little bobble about time reports on the American Foundry Company fire was embarrassingV’ said Chief Voshell. “Tallentire copied

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i them; whether he miseopifcd them, I don’t know." “I copied the reports as they w’ere | given me,” Tafiewtite defended himself. “The mistake was a serious thing. It caused considerable criticism” Voshell added. He and Griffis recommended the operators’ posts be ; : filled by younger men. i As the meeting adjourned Gompf ; | accused “a water company -repre- | sentative who drives a red Pack- ; ard” of liberties with his authority, j He drives to lunch often with his j siren and red light on, chasing other autos off the streets, Gompf declared. John S. Geckler, attorney and former city clerk, and Wilbur Carter, lumber company official, also defended the firemen. “The west, side is proud of the department,” they declared. “No one has presented formal charges to the board,” Charles Myers, board president, said. , “The board will leave no stone unturned to make this department second to none in the country.” HELD FOR NEGLECT' Motorman Faces Juvenile Court Charges. The expression “tokens of affec- j | tion” w r as taken too literally by | ; Harold McGlashan, 3339 East Mich- i jgan street, and as result juvenile j court authorities today charged him : with child neglect. Asa street car motorman, McGlashan is charged with soliciting the affection of a patron, Miss Vera Lamson, 1655 College avenue, by w’ay of free transportation on “tokens” which he is alleged to have given her. Ensuing events, it is charged, led * McGlashan to neglect his wife and two children. Miss Lamson faces trial on a charge of contributing to the neglect of the motorman':: children. Trial will be held Yj Juvenile Judge Frank J. Lahr, I March 4.

tenant figure. 'lt is absorbing, gripping, as only such a story can

System Used in Answering City Fire Calls Inconsistent; Size of Blaze Not Governing Factor

Alarm Sent by Phone Gets Far Less Help Than One Sent From Box. BY DICK MILLER Taxpayers have charged that Indianapolis’ fire department is not efficient, that firemen violate departmental rules, that several blunders have been responsible for high fire losses, but today it w’as learned that the type and amount of equipment sent on first alarm is not determined by the size of the blaze, but by the manner in which the alarm is turned in. * Two residences, directly across the street, in which fires w'ere discovered simultaneously, would be served by varied types of equipment. While flames in one raged above efforts of one truck and two pumpers, a smudge across the street might command attention of enough equipment to handle a serious blaze. The hypothesis is illustrated with the artist’s sketch accompanying this story. Gets Less by Phone Jones, living at 5211,' is" aroused at 2 a. m.. by flames that make his whole basement a raging furnace. He telephones for Are apparatus. In response, according to William Griffis, fire Gamewell system superintendent, a truck and pumper from Engine House 14, twenty-three blocks away, and a pumper from Engine House 28, nineteen blocks distant, would answer the call. On the other hand, Brown, living across the street, has doscovered a small roof fire on his house. He runs to the alarm box, and pulls a direct alarm. To his home are rushed a truck and pumper from Engine House 5; three pumpers from Engine Houses 14, 23 and 28; a squad wagon; a water company representative, and a battalion chief. Jones’ fire is beyond control of the first companies that, arrive, and to get equipment adequate to handle the blaze, the same as was dispatched to the Smith home, a second alarm must be turned in. Example Is Given A concrete example is given here: Several weeks ago the writer was driving behind a small truck at Tremont avenue and Washington street, when the truck motor burst, into flame. The driver ran across the street and pulled a fire alarm box. Engine House 18, four blocks away from the intersection, was expected to arrive in a few seconds. When it finally came on the scene, immediately behind it were wagons from Engine House 6, from their station egihteen blocks distant, and behind them a battalion chief, from Engine House 13, twenty-three blocks away, and a wagon from Engine House 9, eleven blocks distant. This equipment answered an alarm to fight a small automobile fire. A telephoned alarm, for a threealarm fire, would have brought only apparatus from Houses 18 and 9 on first signal. SUES FOR DOB BITE Woman Asks $25,000 From Owner of Animal. Twenty thousand dollars damages for a dog bite, allegedly suffered on “Friday, 13th” of September, 1929, by a tied dog, are asked in a suit filed today in superior court three by Mrs. Bessie Butcher living at Michigan street and Limestone avenue. Trial of the case by Judge William O. Dimlavy will begin Wednesday with Mrs. Pandele G. Shaneff. 1425 West Michigan street, appearing as defendant. Complaint charges that Mrs. Shaneff kept six police dogs on her premises, one of which was tied to a chain in the rear yard. Mrs. Butcher attempted to intervene in a fight between two of the dogs, becoming a victim to the alleged “vicious disposition” of one. The plaintiff charges she sustained severe lacerations to the head and arms. Democrats Appeal Bp United Press MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Feb. 18. —A motion for new trial filed by Democratic officeholders in the Michigan City Republican quo warranto suit was over-ruled today by Judge A. J. Rink in La Porte circuit court. Attorneys for Mayor Fred C. Miller and ether Democratic officeholders followed with filing of notice of an appeal to the Indiana supreme court.

Sloan

be. with the interest never lagging.

y* I z 1 < yflA 1 TRUCK _ D _ u 4-PUMPERS r\ itkuck 1 TWO PUMPERS ! SQUAD WAGON ■ I WATER CO. RER 4 & 60 . HFRE ) BAT T CHtEP T I \ \ FIRE e#X 2141 52*2 x STREET CL O * 1

Artist’s diagram showing how two homes, across the street from each other, and on fire at the same time, could get unequal allotments of fire apparatus tr to fight the flames. The Jones family (right! might have a serious fire and telephone the alarm. A still alarm—one telephoned to fire headquarters brings only one ladder truck and two pumpers Across the street Brown discovers a small roof blaze, and runs to the comer to pull the alarm box. This type of alarm sends out a truck, four pumpers, a squad wagon and battalion chief.

NAUTICAL BLUE TO GRACE MEN’S FEET

New Shoe Coloc* Will Be Added to Tan and Black Standbys. “Here comes my torpedo-boat men.” No longer will this raucous cry be confined to naval wharves w’here sweethearts wait for sailors to come home from the sea. For men’s shoe are going “gunboat.” “sea-going.” “acquatic.” or w’hatyoumaycallit by adding a. third

color to their past centuries of black and tan boots nautical blue. The crier of the blue shoes for ten and wearer r,t the first pair c n Indianapolis streets is E. A. Burrill, educational director of the national association of shoe dealers, w’ho addressed the Indiana Shoe Travelers’ Association

E. A. Burriii

at noon today at the Claypool. Burrill in his hotel room prior to his address forecast that the marine shade would be as prominent as the country club dances of middle west land-lubbers as at yachting regattas on the Thames. “You can see the pair I’m wearing are practical and good looking.” he pointed out as he shoved a trim toe forward for the interviewer's gaze. “Spring sports wear will see the inauguration of the blue in men’s shoes when blue tips and trimmings are used with white sports shoes. The all-blue shoe will come within the next year,” he asserted. “The nautical influence, with men going in for speed-oats and yachts, brought about the shoe industry’s

NEW I. U. BUILDING WILL COST $500,000

Bu Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Feb. 18.— Work of erecting a $500,000 building on the Indiana university campas for chemistry purposes will begin as soon as equipment can be brought to the site, it is announced following the signing of contracts at a meeeting of the university trustees Monday. The contract total is for $504,463. The general contract is held by E. A. Carson. Indianapolis. Tibbetts & Cos., Union City, were successful bidders for heating, plumbing and ventilating work. The Sanborn Electric Company, Indianapolis, and Warner Elevator Company, Cincinnati, are other contract holders. Indiana limestone will be the

After you’ve read this marvelous tale, you’ll have a chance further to enjoy it, for it will appear in film form at the Lyric theater, starting Saturday, March 1. It’s an ail-talkie production, with some of screenland’s greatest artists in the cast. Then, too, there’ll be a prize contest w’hich will interest every child in Indianapolis. You’ll find iurther details of this contest in The Times later this week. This story is especially interesting at this time, when Rear Admiral Richard Byrd is risking his life in the interests of science in the ice-locked contingent of Little America. It'll thrill you, every word of it. So don’t forget—the first Installment will appear in the noon edition of The Times Thursday and will run only in the Noon and Fink editions—the street editions of this newspaper—until it is completed.

Second Section

Entered as Second-Class Matter at PostolTioe. Indianapolis

adoption of the new color,” he explained. At the luncheon meeting of the Indiana association Burrill declared: “The biggest thing a shoe store has to sell is a size and a fit.” HOSPITAL SITE MADE Unit to Be Here, or Within 50 Miles of City. Bji Times Special WASHINGTON. Feb. 18.—Seeking a central location for the new $500,000 veterans’ hospital to be located in Indiana, the hospitalization board has announced the hospital will be located in Indianapolis, or within fifty miles of the state capital. The decision, which has been approved by President Herbert Hoover, eliminated most of the twenty-five cities seeking the hospital. Engineers will visit Indiana to investigate all sites within the prescribed area. TAKES DEATH PLUNGE Detroit Man Leaps Fifteen Stories; No Motive Given. CHICAGO, Feb. 18.—A man believed to be William E. Lowenberg. 33, of Detroit, jumped to his death early today from the eighteenth floor of the Michigan building. His body was found on the roof of an adjoining three-story building. A note addressed to Ralph E. Lowenberg of New York gave no motive for the suicide, merely asking that the body be cremated.

principal material for the buildnig which will be three stories high, consisting of a main structure and two wings. With the exception of one wing, which will be used for classrooms to relieve congestion, the structure will be ased for chemistry purposes. AGED RESIDENT PASSES Mrs. Georgia Burrows Abbett to Be Buried on Thursday. I Funeral services for Mrs. Georgia Burrows Abbett, 80, Indianapolis resident for seventy-one years, who died Monday at her home, 5245 Central avenue, will be held at St. Paul’s Episcopal church at 2:30 i Thursday. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Abbett w’as the widow of Dr. Charles H. Abbett. Surviving her are tw r o sons. Dr. Frank E. Abbett, 3307 Washington boulevard, and Ralph W. Abbett, with whom she lived, and four grandchildren. RUM RUNNING ALLEGED Two Men Held at Paoli Accused of Having Thirty Gallons. BerTimps Special PAOLI, Ind., Feb. 18—Everett Brown and Horace Stuart, giving their address as 304 East Eleventh street, Indianapolis, are held here i today on charges of violating the prohibition law following their arrest Monday night by Orth Brown, state policeman. The officer reported there were i two fifteen-gallon kegs of liquor in an automobile occupied by the two men, and that they also had a bottle. He says both were drunk. The officer, riding a motorcycle, reported he was crowded off a road by the I alleged booze running car and gave ichase into French Lick where the arrests were made.

STATE G. 0. P. ACTS TO CURB PARTY BOSSES Rules Give Personal Right of Appeal to Barred Committeemen. FAVOR ONE CONVENTION Move for Separate Parley to Nominate Judges Is Opposed. ’• * BY BEN STERN Rules tying the hands of any county committee chairman who desires to retain autocratic control, and augmenting rules for direct appeal previously adopted by the Republican state commtttee were to be presented for adoption it, the state committee meeting today by Ralph 1 Kane. Indianapolis attorney, heading a committee from the Marion Club. Kane's proposal would provide for a personal appearance before the committee of the organization member taking the appeal. Under : the present rule, adopted in February, 1929, the appeal is tried and determined solely upon affidavit*. In addition to consideration of new rules, the committee is asked to act upon the request, of the state bar association for separate convention sessions for the nomination of supreme and appellate courts judges. Expense Is Snag Indications are that the committee will not be in favor of separate convention sessions because of the added expense to delegates who must attend one convention and then return to Indianapolis for a second convention. Sec. 15, Art. 2, of the state Constitution. it is claimed, already makes a separate judicial election possible, if desired. The Republican state convention this year probably will be held In i the first or second week of June. It. was held May 22-23. 1928, but due to the number of other con- ! yentions in the city late in May it j would be. difficult to accommodate | the delegates, committee members , said. Proposal Is Important The Kane proposal, which is at | the utmost importance in Marion ' county, where the county chairman ! under the Coffin control lias absolute ouster power provides: "Precinct and vice-committeemen i shall be subject to removal only for neglect of duty, inefficiency, or disloyalty to the Republican party, on written charges filed with the secretary of the committee, specifying | the grounds upon which such reI moval is sought and upon at least j three days’ notice to the accused of the fifing of such charges and time and place of hearing. "The accused party shall be entitled to a hearing before the com- ' mittee and may appear in person i and by attorney and if removed i shall have the right of appeal from | the decision of the county committee to the state committee. Such appeal to the state committee shall be presented and prosecuted under the rules of the state committee governing appeals to such committee from the action of any subordinate subdivision of the party organization.” Would Curb Boss 1 “Adoption of this rule would &b----i rogate the arbitrary power now vested in the county chairman ,** Kane declared. William L. Taylor, Seventh district chairman, declared he would favor the rule. It has been charged repeatedly during the Coffin control that tioth Coffin and Omer Hawkins, when county chairmen, simply banned the presence of any precinct committeemen not in accord with their program. In many instances, it was said, formal ouster was not even resorted to. but armed deputy sheriffs refused insurgent committemen access to the meeting place. Other rules to be presented for approval to the state committee were written in order to abide by the 1929 statute giving women an equal vote in party affairs. Hit Fly-by-Night’s Control of Republican clubs and 1 organization auxiliaries, which In : many instances are merely “fly-by-night” societies for the purpose of collecting contributions, will be attempted in a rule -providing that any club which desires to be authorized as a political organization must obtain certification and approval from the state committee. Another rule provides that a majority of the political organization will comprise a quorum. The present rule provides for attendance of a majority of political units, which in the state committee will mean that fourteen members will to* required to be present instead of seven. BULL INJURES FARMER Lance Driven in Hand While Animal Puts Up Fight. Bu T’tnti Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Feb. 18.— Albert George, dairyman, suffered a severed artery in his right hand and was otherwise Injured when he wa* attacked by a bull on his farm. With the assistance of a veterinarian he was trying to put a ring in the animal's nose. While Georg# was holding the doctor's lance thi bull started struggling and the in-l strument was driven into his hard The animal has killed three calve# on the farm.