Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1930 — Page 2
PAGE 2
FORMER STENO ASKS 55G0.000 IN LOVE SUIT Philanthropist Failed to Keep Marriage Pledge. She Charges. R-i United Preen TiOfi ANGELES, March 7.—Albert Fuchs, 65-year-old Chicken philanthropist, was defendant in a $500,000 breach of promise suit which Miss Martha Gulickson, his former secretary, had on file here today. Miss Gulickson, 34, charged that Fuchs refused to marry her after she came west in response to a letter of proposal. While they waited the three days necessary under California law to obtain a marriage license, Fuchs introduced Miss Gulickson as his wife, she claimed, and a German newspaper carried a story of their wedding. Fuchs indicated that he wanted her to become his common law wife, the woman charged, but she reused. Peru has such a diversity of elevations and climatic peculiarities as to be able to grow almost any product that is known to man.
sls Delivers It All! Jllf' Delivers It All! Each article has been selected with due regard for color harmony and de- i |§|# ™ iMpt- The livin £ room is the heart of the home—and it should be a perfect ensign most adaptable to the American ideal of living room magnificence. mr t §||§| seni .hle that expresses your good taste! Note the smart davenport and club It is smartly modern, yet truly American in grace and beauty! Arranged g|S3| If’ J chair—and luxurious occasional chair—three lamps, end table, magazine so that you may change it to suit your own discriminating taste. See it to- gKBB rack, occasional table, Colonial spinet desk, Windsor chair, mirror and morrow, without fail. * smoking cabinet—a perfect living room. FREE DELIVERY EVERYWHERE! f grad HU jggF AT ALL KIRK STORES! ■SI Delivers This Outfit! Dayßh p- “ ", ~~ “1 ' ~ Vl> "' '' Charming Breakfast Set! j ' e - ■■ --v r. sagiesf, j „ _ arr.'* I Unueialiv oa : See 'hi prlng of heavy coil construction, all-cot- •life " • t . j ! Cj reen—lvory or All White | £""•' •• i carefully constructed new style breakfast ~K ton mattress—three-piece outfit for your / •l O 1 •sL -'• A -e—l TH ~ j suite. In an adorable peach or green and II I /-v spare bedroom at an unusual saving "rj -M Dr °P teas table and four diners > g ** * * Term, to Please! : g9KjffIHRJ / Delivered for $1 Down! Dressers j Sturdy, comfortable, well built, B g saving opportunity, gorgeous ( n„„ f i /it • - ■ beautifully finished am me am f s'j M K f? e£ * k sS® S de*lg n, of ex- m mt \ | DcllCn OF V_vll£lu I ! in mahogany. ‘-v V R {|*JTTlfefflljKY JgjSi K Ifeiit quislte construe- /I ffe If .. j Special at 4 •* tion. Special at.. j j ! 22-24 East 311-313 East ! | . S Washington Indiana s Largest Furniture Retailers Washington | y—lected hardwood construction, j Q4-i.~ .-.4- * C , i alnut finished bedroom bench I 1 1 Large swinging ws' ! OLItJtJL Oil 66 L ! chair In a U() I Sit; Sr ': ... 16.00 ; I South | 55f?...... 2.98 I
Four Generations Meet
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Four generations met in Indianapolis today when the 87th birthI day of Mrs. Louisa Selby was celebrated at the home of her son, ! L. M. Crowe, 621 East McCarty street. In the photo are, left to right. Mrs. Charles Nicely of 850 Greer I street: her granddaughter; Crowe, Mrs. Selby’s son; her great-grand-daughter. Jacqueline Nicely, 3, and Mrs, Selby. Mrs. Selby lives in Petersburg, Ind.
DEBATES WILL BE HELD Butler Teams to Meet Earlham and Wabash College Orators, Butler university’s debating teams will contest with Earlham college’s , negative and the Wabash college af- ' flrmative debaters Friday night at Richmond, and here, on the ques- j tion: “Resolved, That there be con- ! structed a St. Lawrence ship canal !
for sea-going vessels by way of Montreal.” Julia Randall, Ft. Benjamin Harrison: Norman Robinson, 2515 East Riverside drive, and Paul Duncan, 1310 South Hawthorne lane, were selected to tak part in finals of the university peace oratorical contest, in competitive tryouts recently completed. The winner of the school contest will represent Butler in the state contest at Earlham college in April.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FREE PRESS IS UPHELD IN OHIO lUDOPS RULING "ontempt Sentences on Two Cleveland Editors Reversed. Hu KcriptM-Hoitard A ffc;i<ipfr Allinnr , CLEVELAND. 0., March 7.—A 'free people must have a free press, and must have the right to speak freely their thought.” ** That sentence, contained in the I written opinion of Chief Justice ■ Willis Vickery of the Cuyahoga court of appeals, is the keynote o£ a decision reversing contempt of court sentences imposed on tw r o Cleveland editors by Common Pleas Judge Frederick P. Walther. The tw r o are Louis B. Seltzer, editor, and Carlton K. Matson, chief editorial w’riter of the Cleveland Press. They were convicted by Judge Walther July 17 on the strength of editorials appearing in the press July 11, in which Judge Walther was criticised for issuing an injunction designed to protect Thistledown race track from raids by Sheriff E. J. Hanratty. Sheriff Hanratty, on advice of the j county prosecutor’s office, ignored
the order, made his raid, and the race meet, where the contribution system of betting was in use, was halted. Judge Vickery in his opinion, concurred in by his associates. Judge Manuel Letine and Judge John J. Sullivan, ruled that Judge Walther erred in sitting as trial judge, erred in imposing a sentence in excess of that permitted by statute, and erred in considering the editorials contemptuous. Judge Walther imposed fines of SSOO and costs and thirty-day jail sentences. “We believe,” Judge Vickery wrote, “that the ends of justice will be served better if judges refer matters of contempt, other than those committed in their immediate presence, to another judge for trial." In summing up the case, and cause for the reversal, Judge Vickery said: Judge Walther was guilty of abuse of discretion in hearing the case; he was not in fit condition to give unbiased judgment; his injunction w-as "nothing more than a piece of paper that had no judicial order upon It;” nobody could be guilty of contempt for violating that “injunction” and as a corrollary from that, nobody could be guilty of contempt in commenting upon that socalled order and in characterizing it in the strongest sense that it could be characterized. Judge Walther declined to comment on the reversal. Dating from 200 B. C.. the waters of the Ming River, China, have been utilized in an irrigation system.
TEST DIESEL ENGINE New Type Locomotive Tried on German Road. Du I'nitt <t Pr> t* BERLIN, March 7.—A Diesel-en-g ned locomotive wfth 1.200-horse power has been tried out by the German railroad company in the vicinity of Stuttgart. The test, which followed six years of preparation, was declared a success. It was shown that the percentage of effective utilization of fuel was more than double that of the locomotives fired with coal. I Because of the high price of oil and the great cost producing Swiftest , Easiest Way to End Bilious Spell When you neglect those first t symptoms of constipation bad breath, coated tongue, listlessness, ; the whole system soon suffers. Ap- | petite lags. Digestion slows up. You j become, headachy, dizzy, bilious. It’s easy to correct sluggist bowel action! Take a candy Cascarct toI night. See how quickly—and pleas- ; antly—the bowels are activated. All j the souring waste is gently propelled from the system. Regular and complete bowel action is restored. Cascarets are made from pure J ca&cara, a substance which doctors , agree actually strengthens bowel j muscles. All drug stores have Casi carets. 10c.—Advertisement.
Diesel engines, however, the genera I introduction of these locomotives in
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