Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 259, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1930 — Page 1
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TAFT TO LIE IN STATE AT 0. S, CAPITOL Final Tribute to Be Paid Statesman and Jurist in Rotunda. NATION IN MOURNING Congress and Supreme Court Ceases Activities as Mark of Respect. u I nit>d Prens WASHINGTON. March 10.—The nation prepared today to pay final and full tribute to William Howard Taft, who as President and chief justice, did much to mould the course of Its history and development in recent years. To the clatter of cavalry, the body of the statesman and Jurist will be borne, with full military honors, Tuesday to the capitol. there to lie in state in the rotunda under the great white dome. i Afterward, he will be taken to the heights of Arlington, across *he Potomac, and buried among others of the nation’s notables in the great national cemetery, which overlooks Washington. Sanford Also Eulogized Congress and the United States supreme court, who.se bench Taft, graced for many years, ceased their activities today as a mark of respect,. Associate Justice Edward Terry Sanford, who preceded Mr. Taft in death only a few' hours Saturday, •was also eulogized at brief sessions held by the court and both houses of congress. Four members of the supreme court-. Chief Justice Hughes, and Associate Justices Mcßeynolds, Butler, and Stone, were in Knoxville, Tenn., today attending the funeral of Justice Sanford. The whole court will attend Mr. Taft’s funeral here Tuesday. Over the White House, the flag was at half-staff, which occurs only upon the death of a President. An official mourning period of thirty days, during which all White House social functions have been canceled, was proclaimed by President Hoover. To Attend Funeral President and Mrs. Hoover, associates on the supreme court, cabinet members, and other high officials will attend the funeral services at All Souls Unitarian church here at 2 Tuesday afternoon and follow the procession across the Potomac and up the winding road which leads among thousands of monuments to the illustrious dead. Calvin Coolidge, the only surviving ex-President, also is expected to attend the funeral with Mrs. Coolidge. An unique honor will be paid the former President in laying his body in state in the Capitol. Only Presidents. who have died in office hitherto have had this recognition. Mr. Taft will share this honor with Lincoln. Garfield and Harding and the Unknown Soldier. The bodv of Taft will be taken to the Capitol Tuesday morning. Borne on a fir, g-drb peel caisson. VISIONS TRADE MENACE Attorney Charges Eastern Interests Control Freight Rates. Bu United Pres:! ST. LOUIS. March 10.-Cleveland A. Newton, former congressman and attorney for the Mississippi Valley Association, declared today that the industrial and commercial future of the Mississippi valley is being jeopardized by the organized activity of eastern industrial and shipping interests. Eastern activities arc attempting to destroy the export trade of the valley states by controlling export freight rates, he charged.
FIRE TOLL IS $350,000 Flame* Sweep Through Business Block at Mt. Clemons. Bu United rrr** MT. CLEMENS. Mich . March 10. —Fire swep: through a business block here today, doing damage estimated at $350,000 before it was brought under control. Aid was sent, from Detroit to combat the blaze, which leveled a vacant bank building and a store. TWO DIE IN FLAMES Women Are Trapped in Apartment House Room by Blare. Bu V nited Prett MEMPHIS. Tenn., March 10 Fire that trapped them in their apartment house room today caused the death of two young women and minor injuries to another person The victims were identified as Faith Becklev. 30. and Myrtle Cora Brewster. 22. AGED MAN IS INJURED Anthony Walters, Struck by Auto, Sustains Broken leg. Struck by an automobile driven by H. B. Hamilton, 70, of 2003 North Pennsylvania street, at Summit and Washington streets today. Anthony. Walters, 87. of 1717 East New York street, suffered a broken leg. He was taken home in a city hospital ambulance.
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Tlie Indianapolis Times Increasing cloudiness, becoming unsettled tonight and Tuesday; probably with showers; cooler Tuesday.
VOLUME 41—NUMBER 259
Dr. Cook Free, 'Broke'at 65, Is Beginning Life Anew'
\ Bu t nited Press ! LEAVENWORTH, Kan.. March 10. i —A new night interne in the peni- : fentiarv here Sunday night took the place of Dr. Frederick A. Cook, author, lecturer and explorer, who ; Sunday walked through the big door ; of the penitentiary a free mam. :>a- ! roled after serving partof a four--1 teen-year nine, months sentence. Cook for the last four years has been night interne in the prison hospital. He was brought from the prison' to a downtown hotel, wTiere he met: newspaper men. The 65-year-old man was dressed in a faded blue suit. A red necktie contrasted hisi pale blue eyes.
$250,000 Value Is Placed on Voice by Film Singer
P.)i Times Special LOS ANGELES. March 10.—A stethoscope may tell the whole story in the average insurance examination, but a singer’s voice, especially if it happens to be valued at $250,000, is something else again. Lloyd’s of London, through its local representative. Miss Charlotte Betz, won’t insure the voice of Vivienne Segal, former Broadway star now r in the films, for that amount until a more complete test Is made. The company has demanded medical certificates concerning throat conditions, affidavits from musical judges as to vocal ability and restriction of abnormal voice exercising.
WINDERS IS DUE FOR DRY POST Nomination as State Chief Reported Scheduled. Dr. F. Scott Mcßride, national superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, is expected to nominate the Rev. C. H. Winders for the Indiana league supermtendency when headquarters committee of the state organization meets here Tuesday, it was reported today. Dr. Winders has been in charge since the death of Dr. E S. Shumaker. Nomination for state superintendent muso come from Mcßride and approval voted by the headquarters committee. Sam McNaught of lowa once was approved, but declined and later accepted the Ohio superintendency. Winders stands well with the headquarters committee and his opposition largely has been overcome, it was said.
‘ONE CLEAR CALL’
Poetry to Form Eulogy for Taft
Bu l Vitrn Prp*A WASHINGTON. March 10.—Two poems by Tennyson and one by Wordsworth will form the funeral oration for William Howard Taft. Because of the wish of Mrs. Taft eulogies at the church and grave will be omitted. “Who is the happy warrior?" asks Wordsworth in one of the poems that, will be read at the church. He answers: “Tis he whose law is reason; who depends “Upon that law as on the best, of friends: “And labors good on good to fix, and owes “To virtue every triumph that he knows.” And again: “Tis finally the man who. lifted high. “Conspicuously object in a nation's eye “Plays in the many games of life, that on “Where what, he most doth value must be won—” And in Tennyson's ’Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellingford:” “Yea. let all good things await “Him who cares not to be great. “But as he saves or serves the state.” Finally, at the grave, the majestic, sweeping lines of Tennyson’s “Crossing the Bar," will be read: “Sunset and evening star, “And one clear call for me! “And may there be no moaning of the bar. ‘“When I put out to sea.”
SCORES DIE IN BLAST Dead Mostly Children: Fire in Movie Theatei. Bu United Prett . FUSAN, Korea, Starch 10 ; A naphtha explosion and fire wrecked the auditorium of the Chinkai naval station today and took the lives of score of persons, most of them school children, attending a mition picture showing there. The death toll was placed at 104, although it was impossible to check accurately in the confusion and panic. LINDY TO TRY LONG TRIP Determined to Demonstrate Glider Ability in Flight United Prett DEL MONTE, Cal., March 10.— Determined to demonstrate the feasibility of long glider flight. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, today was to take off witli the first favorable ; wind and follow & route almost due south from the Monterey peninsula 1 district towards Los Angeles.
He took nothing from the prison but his clothing, a sheaf of personal papers and the $74 w'hich he posseessed when he entered leavenworth. ‘T am broke, gentlemen,” cook said. “I am beginning again.’ Arrives in Chicago Hu Uhitc'l Pr*‘Sß CHICAGO. March 10.—A shabbily dressed man arrived quietly in Chicago today, registered at an unpreteitious Loop hotel and dropped his worn and scarred little leather bag in a shabby room. A short while later the hotel
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Vivienne Segal
35.000 ATTEND 'MARTYR' RITES Tribute Paid Jobless Youth Killed in Labor Clash. Bu United press PHILADELPHIA. March 10.—Carl Mackley, 22-year-old Philadelphia knitter, was “just another young fellow out of a job” a few days ago. Today he was one of labor's immortals. Mackley was shot, to death in a. clash with nonunion workers at the H. C. Aberle hosiery mills here. Fully 35,000 persons attended Mackley’s funeral here Sunday afternoon. McPherson square, where the outdoor services were held, was jammed. Edward F. McCready, personal representative of William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, asked the assembled thousands to repeat an oath that they would “continue the struggle against low wages, poverty and oppression.”
JOHNSON TO GET POST Gary Man to Succeed Wright as Auditor of Commission. J. Hiram Johnson, Gary, will succeed Frank tßone Dry) Wright as auditor of the state securities commission, it was announced today by Secretary of State Otto G. Fifield. Wright resigned recently, due to the publicity growing out of his acceptance of a trusteeship in the Indiana Real Estate Securities Corporation, which ran afoul of the "blue sky" law. MURDER AFTER PARTY Fatal Shooting Laid to Man Living at Universal. Btt Timet Soecial NEWPORT, Ind.. March 10.—A charge of first degree murder stands against John Dolph, Universal, here today as the result of the killing of Jim Fassitti, 36, Universal. Sunday. The killing followed an all-night party in which the men took part. The prisoner declines to make a statement. %
INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, MAPvCH 10, 1930
management shifted him to a richly furnished suite w'hen he was visited by a crowd of newspaper men and photographers, who revealed his identity to be Dr. Frederick A. Cook explorer, author and lecturer, and released Sunday from Leavenworth prison. The Brown suit he had on was the same he was wearing when he entered the penitentiary five years ago. following conviction on charges of using the mails in a Texas oil promotion. The little bag was the one he had carried around the world for twenty years in the course of explorations and Chautauqua tours.
ROYAL TRIBUTE PAID TO BYRD BY AUSTRALIA Arctic's Conqueror Hailed as World Hero as Ship Reaches Dock. Bit United Press DUNEDIN, N. 7.. March 10.— Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, with the weather-hardened crew of his history-making Antarctic expedition, came back to civilization today to be greeted by the most tumultuous reception New Zealand ever has accorded a w'orld hero. His sturdy ship, the City of New 7 York, plainly showing the battering of ice and ravages of wind, gave eloquent testimony to the ravages of a year at the ice-barrier and its battle through the floes on the return trip. Expresses Gratitude Byrd's men. also giving evidence in their faces of the rigorous Antarctic •weather, looked hard and fit as they joyfully came ashore to the deafening shouts of Dunedin’s population and the shriek of ship sirens. Despite their year at the bottom of the w 7 orld. a majority of them had gained weight. The explorer's first words were to express his gratitude to the people of New Zealand for their assistance in the expedition. After that he discussed the high points of his plunge into the south pole region and the success of his airplane and dog sled exploration. “Personally,” he said “I am not the least concerned with claiming the land for America. I merely continued the work begun by British pioneers, and all I have done was to touch or, the fringe of a subject which would bear the study of generations to come. “Lot to Learn’' "Tlie results of this expedition to science can not be estimated at present. but geology, biology, meteorology, physics and the science of radio all should benefit. “There was a lot to learn, because the Antarctic is wholly unlike the Arctic. It is in the grip of an ice age similar to that which held Europe in its thrall, 30,000 years ago.” Tlie City of New York hardly was recognizable as the trim, freshly painted ship that left this port more than a year ago. Most of the paint had gone, and her sides were dented and scarred. CARDS SLAYING CLEW Marked Deck Found Scattered Over Murdered Man’s Body. Bu United Press NEW YORK, March 10.—Only a deck of marked playing cards, strewn like confetti over the bulletsprayed body of Tony Bonventre, provided any clew for detectives today in solving the mystery of his murder. Tony's body was found in a stolen car. grimly decorated with the bluebacked playing cards, which apparently were the cause of his death. Hourly Temperatures a. m—. 39 10 a. m 48 ta. m 38 11 a. m 51 8 a. m 42 12 (noon).. 52 9 a. m 45 1 p. m 57
HANGED FOR MURDER Wyoming Sheepman Dies on Prison Gallows. Bu United Prett RAWLINS, Wyo., March 10. George Brownfield. Wyoming sheepman, was hanged at the state penitenitary here today for the slaying of Theodore Thomas, a sheepherder, last July. The 54-year-old sheep man, who was said to have attempted to assault his victim's wife after the murder, was hanged at 12:18 a. m. He was pronounced dead fifteen minutes later.
CITY HALL’S SMOKE SMUDGE TO BE TAMED
/' > ITY officials today wiped out the city's most flagrant smoke nuisance by ordering purchase of steam heat for the city hall to displace the black coal smudge that has rolled from the administration building.
ACCUSED WIFE KILLER TRIES TO END LIFE Andrew Judt, 66, Slashes Arm, Wrist and Throat in Jail Cell. SCENE VISITED BY JURY Defendant Visibily Affected by Deep Wounds as Trial Is Renewed. Visibly shaken by the effects of wounds inflicted in an attempted suicide early todaf in his cell at the county jail, Andrew Judt, 66, occupied the witness stand three hours for cross-examination in his criminal court jury trial from the murder of his wife, Mary Ann Judt, last September. Judt slashed his throat, arm and wrist four hours before he was to be taken to the courtroom for the third day of his trial. The trial took anew turn today when the jury retired shortly before noon to be taken to the scene of the murder. 423 Virginia avenue. This is the first time in many years that a criminal court jury has been taken to a crime scene.
Defense Move Wins Motion to permit the jurors to view the room where Judt fired two revolver shots into the body of his fourth wife, was made by defense counsel. State’s attorneys objected, but were overruled by trial judge. Homer Elliott. Judt claims he shot his wife in self-defense when she threatened his life with a butcher knife following a quarel over the cleanliness of their 2-year-old son. Charles Thomas. Judt is an invalid. On the stand today, Judt was wracked many times by fits of coughing, apparently provoked by the throat wound, sustained in his attempt to end his life. He was cross-questioned at length, and responded readily about details of the struggle that ended in the fatal shooting. Called by Prisoners Night Jailers Mike Voght and Harry Donaldson were called byother prisoners In the lower cel) block about 5 a. m. They found Judt bleeding freely from two gashes in the left arm. one in the left wrist, and a deep slash on the right side of the throat. Harold Cox. county physician, took twenty-seven stitches to close the wound. Deputy sheriffs say Judt will be taken to criminal court today to continue his murder trial. Judt was weak today from loss of blood. “I was nervous. T couldn't sleep,” Judt told the jailors explaining his suicide attempt. Although deputies say he cut himself with a fragment, of broken mirror, Judt declared he used a piece of tin sharpened on the cement floor.
WAR ON BALL POOLS Cigar Store Owner Held on Gambling Charge. Ivan Bell, operator of 8 cigar store at 2654 Northwestern avenue, was the first victim of Police Chief Jerry E. Kinney’s war on baseball pool tickets. Bell was charged with keeping a gambling device after a police squad raided the cigar store Sunday, and is alleged to have confiscated 159 books of tickets. FIRE WRECKS PLANT Suesz Warehouse Will Be Rebuilt at Once. The Otto Suesz Transfer and Storage Company warehouse, at Walnut and Economy streets, destroyed by fire Sunday night with a so. (*n loss, will be rebuilt at once, Suesz said today. Fire Chief Harry E. Voshell stepped on a rusty nail, and was given first aid treatment by a city hospital ambulance physician. TAX TROUBLES AIRED ‘Expert’ Charged With Falsifying Screen Actor’s Returns. By United Press HOLLYWOOD, March 10.—The income tax difficulties of Hollywood’s screen colony today had taken anew turn with the arrest of J. Ira Angus, tax “expert.”
The board of works, after a conference with officials of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company, ordered a contract be drawn up fer the purchase of steam heat from the utility for $3,000 yearly. Approximately $2,500 will -be
Entered ns Second-Class Matter at Postoff’ce. Indianapolis
Elinor Smith Claims New Altitude Record Young Aviatrix Lands at Roosevelt Field, Estimates Women's Mark at ‘About 30.000 Feet.’
Bu Vr i Service ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y„ March 10. —Elinor Smith, young aviator, landed shortly after noon today and announced she had established anew 7 women's altitude record of “about 30.000 feet.” The recognized record is 23.996 feet, reached by the late Man-el Crosson of Los Angeles. Miss Smith wore a leather coat, riding breeches, a heavy flying suit (fur lined), a helmet and flying boots. A parachute pack was strapped about her and around her neck was a small oxygen tank A large one, to be turned on at 15.000 feet, was fastened in the plane, a Belianca, equipped with a 300horse power Wright motor. All of the seats were removed ex-
?xcept the one for the pilot, and the windows sealed. Tlie door of the ;abin was padded with felt.
JAMMED PISTOL SAVES 3 LIVES Wife, Daughter Wounded by South Side Man. An automatic pistol jammed in the hand of David Sheren, 55, of 907 South Meridian street, _ Sunday, probably saving lives of Mrs. Roseta Sheren. his wife; Miss Mildred Sheren. 16, his daughter, and himself, police assert. Before the gun stuck Sheren wounded his w-ife above the right knee and shot the daughter in the left foot. Then he stabbed himself with a pockelknife. City hospital physicians say none of the woundis serious. Mrs. Sheren and her husband have been estranged many months. Three other children, Miss Murrel Sheren, 19; Francis, 11, and Virginia. 9, ran from the house when the shooting started. NEW EDITOR NAMED Matson Appointed to Post on Buffalo Times. Bn Uniteil Press BUFFALO, March 10.— Appointment of Carlton K. Matson to the editorship of the Buffalo ’limes was announced today by George B. Parker, editor in chief of the ScrippsHoward newspapers. Matson, who succeeds Ted O. Thackrey, resigned, retires as chief editorial writer of the Cleveland Press. Another change in the Times organization also was announced in the resignation of Philip Metz as business manager, John L. Meilienk of the Cleveland Press being placed temporarily in charge of the business department. Matson, as a defendant in the recent Cleveland Press contempt of court case, was one of the figures in that victory for freedom of the press.
SEEKS NEW AIR RECORD Elinor Smith Begins Flight to Set Feminine Altitude Mark. Bu United Press ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y., March 10.—Elinor Smith, one of the best-known woman fliers in the east, went aloft at 10:38 a. m. today in an attempt to set an altitude record for women. GUNWOMAN PLEADS Denies Murder of State Cop; Faces Death. ■ flv United Press NEWCASTLE. Pa.. March 10.— ; Irene Schroeder, blond daughter of a Benwood (W. Va.) fishmonger, [pleaded not guilty when brought to | trial here today to answer the ' state’s charge of murder in the killing of Corporal Brady Paul, state i highway patrolman, last Dec. 27. i Conviction may result in a sentence of death In the electric chair. womTn found” slain Blanford Housekeeper Apparently Beaten With Ax. Bu United Press CLINTON. Ind., March 10.—Police here are without clews in their efforts to determine who beat Clara Sparks, 60, to death, apparently with an ax. and carried her body to a point between Crompton Hill and Universal. The body was found Saturday night. Wounds on the head and one arm indicated murder, officers said. The victim was a housekeeper at Elanford. No one there could suggest a motive for the slaying.
saved by the junking of the city hall boilers, it was estimated. Smoke abatement officials of the city have found the city hall's smudge a constant argument from business houses, who were asked to abate smoke.
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Elinor Smith
Hero Pirate Columbus Crossed Ocean Long Before 1492, Says Historian.
MADRID. March 10.—If Luis Ulloa, Peruvian engineer and historian, is correct, American children can tear up their histories of Christopher Columbus and begin all over again. Columbus, Ulloa asserts, as a pirate who visited America, probably Florida, long before the traditional date of 1492, and already had made his crossing when he went to Queen Isabella with a plea for money. Ulloa's evidence, consisting of documents discovered in a castle at Simancas, near Valladolid, will be given in a thesis to be submitted in May at the international historical congress at Seville. The historian has been engaged in his research for nearly 7 forty years. tt U It C CHRISTOPHER and his brother A Diego. Uulla says, were engaged in piracy, which was not an unusual line to maritimecommerce in those days. Their adventures carried them westward, into the new world, and upon finding this new territory they decided to profit bv the knowledge, through obtaining the Spanish vice-royalty for the region, Ulloa says. The exact date of Columbus’ birth is not known, but it is believed plausible that he was born in 1436, which would make it 1464 when he talked to Isabella. INMATES ARE SAVED 1.200 March Out Quietly as Fire Rages in Building. BU United Press JACKSONVILLE. 111.. March 10. —Twelve hundred patients in the administration building of the State Hospital for the Insane marched quietly to safety today when fire destroyed the cupola of the structure.
DON SET FOR TRIALS British Racer to Go After Record Saturday. DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., March 10— With British and American flags embossed on opposite sides of its hood, Kaye Don's powerful Silver Ballet was on the hard-packed sands of Daytona Beach today in preparation for trial spins before assaulting the world's auto speed record of 231.36 miles an hour. The trim craft was unpacked from its crating Sunday under the careful supervision of the determined personable Briton, who next Satur day hopes to guide it to anew mark of 250 miles or more. WALES IN JUNGLES Prince, Recovered, Resumes Hunting Trio. Bu United Press NAIROBI, Kenya Colony, Africa, March 10.—The prince of Wales, thoroughly recovered from his attack of malaria fever, is on his way back into the jungles of the Uganda protectorate. This time he expects to visit and photograph, if he can, a remarkable tribe of Congo pygmies. Rosen walds Bound for London Bu United Press LONDON. March 10—Julius Rosenwald, Chicago philanthropist and his bride are on their way to London after a honeymoon spent in Egypt and along the Nile.
The board of works had considered use of stokers, but abandoned the idea for the saving which will accrue with the installation of city heat. Use of the present city hall boilers will be abandoned this spring.
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TWO CENTS
FIGHT FLARES AS MINE UNION OPENS SESSION Delegates From Rebellious District Are Expected Here Tonight. LEWIS TO FIGHT SPLIT Rump Convention Under Way at Springfield. III.; War Predicted. Delegations of union miners are expected to arrive tonight from the rebellious Illinois district for the international convention of the United Mine Workers of America, which convened at Tomlinson hall here. The arrivals will throw into the local convention, held at the same time of a rump convention at Springfield, 111., both convening today, the fight to maintain the United Mine Workers of America intact. Opening the convention today, John L. Lewis, international president, gave evidence that he will fight the threatened split in ranks of the union. Bitter Fight Predicted His committee appointments, announced this morning, listed a member from district No. 12, Illinois, on every committee, a recognition given to no other single district. At the same time he indicated the bitter fight between international officers of the mine workers and Alexander Howat, president of district No. 14. Kansas, when that district had representatives named on but two of the nine committees, the representative in each case being Henry Allai of Arma. Kan., international executive board member and a loyal supporter of the international. Rumbles of the rebellion within the mine union which resulted in the calling of the convention of ‘rank -and file” members which convened at Springfield, 111., today and which threatens to throw the American Federation of Labor into the fight, were heard during routine organization of the convention here today. Delegate List Held Open On a report of the credentials committee. William J. Sneed of Herrin, 111., objected to approval of a tentative credential list, declaring that a group of Illinois delegations will arrive tonight. “We do not want the malcontents to say we seated these delegates Illegally or refused to permit them to sit illegally.” he declared, in urging the credential list remain open. After explanations that, the list can be corrected at any time, he withdrew objections. T. N. Taylor, of the Indiana State Federation of Labor, placed that body behind the international union when he declared in an address: “The Indiana State federation of Labor will co-operate with the mine workers union in every way.” Lewis Given Backing Adolph Fritz, secretary of the state federation, also gave backing to the international union when he declared: "I think it, ill gotten to start any rump convention whatever. President Lewis has been square in every respect in his dealings and rulings. (Turn to Page 2)
NOTED ORGANIST HELD French Musician. Blind Since Birth, Afoul Immigration Law. ft U T H its fl NEW YORK. March 10.—Andre Marchal, blind musician, who probably is France’s best known organist, became involved in immigration red tape today and despite his prominence, was forced to go to Ellis island after leaving the Atlantic transport liner Minnewaska. Marchal has been blind since birth and the immigration laws forbid entrance of the physically unfit unless it can be proved they will not become public charges. DUKE FALLS OFF HORSE Princeof Wales’ Brother Han Fifth Narrow Escape While Riding. Fiu United Prrtf’ MELTON MOWBRAY, England. March 10.—The duke of Gloucester, third so nos Wing George, had his fifth narrow escape in the last two weeks when he was thrown while following the Quorn hounds. The duke merely was shaken, but his horse was lamed badly. Five hunters which the duke has ridden in the last fortnight have been injured, two in one day. STRUGGLE IN HARMONY Chicago Woman and Dog Foil Efforts of Would-Be Bandit. Bn United Prett CHICAGO, March 10.—Mrs. Ethel Evans and her dog Bingo claim the record for the best combination against bandits. M*b. Evans foiled a holdup by throwing a cup of coffee in the face of the would-be bandit and her dog took the seat of the man’s trousers as a momento. Police, seeking a pantless person. captured John Howland, 18, who was said to fit the description.
Outside Marlon County 3 Crtits
