Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 287, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1930 — Page 1

Mother Braves Flames 3 Times in Heroic Effort to Save Baby

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Mrs. Alice Gamble

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Thomas McGlenn

**T tE'3 a grand fireman.” In four FI words Mrs. Alice Gamble, paid tribute to Thomas McGlenn of Pumper Company 17. for rescue of her 2-year-old daughter, Mary Alice, from the blazing Gamble home this morning. Leaning over the little crib In Ward C-4 of city hospital she forgot the'pain of burns on her own arms, from elbows to shoulders, suffered in three dashes into her burning home in attempts to rescue the child. In the four words she poured out her gratitude and her hope that the life of the baby will be saved. Tlie child is in a critical condition and the mother, who refused to take a hospital bed and insisted on going to its bedside after physicians dressed the burns she suffered.

LAUB FIGHTS CHARGE OF REALTY SWINDLE Defense to Argue Saturday on Motion to Quash. Legal flight of Lyle T. Laub, former president of the defunct Realty Finance and Building Company. Indianapolis, for freedom from charges of embezzlement, grand larceny and conspiracy, will be carried to a climax Saturday morning before Special Judge Ralph Kane w hen arguments will be heard on a motion of defense attorneys to quash the indictments. Returned six years ago by the grand jury, the indictments alleged that Laub embezzled large amounts of money in a gigantic scheme to awindle local residents in realty deals. Laub has been at liberty under *2,500 bond since the bills were returned. Approved by Chief Deputy Prosefeutor Paul Rhoadarmer, the motion to quash was filed in Laub’s behalf today by Attorneys John RuckleBliaus and Michael Ryan. JESTS 7n — death chair Negro Bandit Executed for Murder of Chicago Policeman. Bv f niti lPn m CHICAGO, April 11.—Jolting until the last. Aaron Woodwaftl, 35, Negro bandit, who killed a policeman when surprised while holding up a minister, was electrocuted today. Woodward had been reprieved six times. POPE MAY GO t)N AIR Considers Message June 29, When Vatican Station Opens. Bu United Pm* VATICAN CITY, April 11.—Pope Pius may deliver a radio message t* the world June 29. when the powerful new Vatican broadcasting station is opened in connection with St. Peter's festival. Artist's Wife Seeks Divorce Bu Vnitrd Pret* NEW YORK, April 11.—Haskell Coffin, artist, admitted today his wife, Frances Starr, actress, is in Reno seeking a divorce. He said there was only one reason—nonsupport. He explained he was ill for two years.

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The Indianapolis Times Partly cloudy and continued warm tonight and Saturday, but cooler by Saturday night.

VOLUME 41—NUMBER 287

HER clothing aflame from three dashes up a fire-filled stairway this morning in attempts to rescue her sleeping 2-year-old daughter, Mrs. Alice Gamble, wife of John Gamble, 348 West McCarty street, was climbing a ladder to a window of the blazing room when firemen airi\ed. Pulling the mother to safety, Thomas McGlenn of No. 17 pumper company, with Dennis Lyons of the same company, scaled the ladder, broke windows of the bedroom and McGlenn entered the inferno to reach the bed of the child, Mary Alice Gamble, 2, on the fsr side of the room. , . . .. . . . , Wakened by the heat, the child apparently had attempted to leave the bed and then, overcome by the fumes, had buried her head beneath a mattress in fright. The intense heat had seared her arms, legs and entire body. aaa a ° ° . THE child was taken to city hospital, where her condition is critical. The mother, severely burned in her rescue efforts, also was taken to city hospital. Flames drove Mrs. Gamble down the stairway of the home three times. The fire started in a middle upstairs room at 7 a. m. while Mrs. Gamble was downstairs dressing her son, Vincent, 2 months. Two stepchildren, Harry. 14. and Howard, 11, were downstairs at the time, while the small daughter slept upstairs. The father had left for work. Smelling smoke, Mrs. Gamble dashed up the stairway. The narrow hall at its top was filled with flames. The door leading to the room where the child slept was closed. Driven back down the stairs by the flames, her own clothing ablaze. Mrs. Gamble carried the infant son to the heme of Howard Losh, 346 West McCarty street, first stopping to beat out the fire on her own clothing. m a a a a a HER hair was blazing when she reached the next door where Mrs. Alice Terrell. 338 East McCarty street, visiting at the Losh home, aided in beating out these flames. Breaking loose from Mrs. Terrell with the cry “help me save Mary Alice,” the mother dashed back into the blazing home. Mrs. Terrell called to two passing men to place a ladder to the front window of the home to rescue the baby. The men obeyed, and climbed the ladder, but did r.ot break the glass when they saw the flame-filled room. Their names were not learned. Meanwhile, Mrs. Gamble, her clothing afire the second time, dashed from the house, threw herself upon the ground and rolled to beat out the flames. Before neighbors could seize her she dashed into the house for the third attempt to gain her way through the fire to the bedside of her child. For the third time she was routed by the flames and. running from the house, hysterical, she began to climb the ladder to the window of the child's room. a a a a a a THEN firemen arrived. Two of them pulled her from the ladder while McGlenn dashed into the house, a robe over his face, and carried the child from the room. The child was badly burned and suffered from fumes which had rendered it unconscious. Fire damage to the house and contents* w r as limited to S3OO. The family was preparing to move and furnishings were packed and stacked ready for arrival of the moving van today.

THREE-POWER PACT TO BE RATIFIED AT PARLEY NEXT WEEK

Treaty Limiting Navies of U. S., England, Japan Being Drafted. BY WEBB MILLER TTnited Press Staff Correspondent LONDON. April 11.—The fivepower conference, which convened Jan. 21 to limit the world's great navies, will end its sessions late next week, probably Thursday, without having achieved its purpose, but with its chief delegates “very well satisfied.” A treaty limiting the navies of the United States, Great Britain and Japan, until 1936, and pledging France and Italy to certain principles formulated at the conference, but not to limitation, will be signed at a plenary session Thursday if drafting of the pact can be completed by that date. The treaty will be so drafted, it was understood, that France and Italy may subscribe to the full limitation terms later if negotiations, which French sources said would be continued, are successful in removing the obstacles which prevented a five-power pact. The agreement among the United States, Great Britain and Japan will provide a battleship building “holiday” until 1936. Naval equality between the United States and Britain will have become a fact, both agreeing to maintain a navy of equal strength in future. Agreement on seevral phases of the naval question has been reached by all five powers and the French and Italians will sig the treaty with the understanding they are bound only to those phases not referring to limitation. They agree to the restriction of the use of submarine. No submarine can disable or attack a submissive merchant vessel during a storm, or when all the crew and passengers can not reach shore or another ship in safety. The French and Italians also agree to limiting the size of submax ines to 2.000 tons each, with a maximum of 5-inch guns—except each nation may have three submarines between 2,000 and 3,000 tons bearing 6-inch guns.

RADIO SMASHED IN QUARREL; DUCHESS TRIES SUICIDE, LOVER SAYS

Hu United Pre*t LONDON. April ll.—' The duchess of Leinster, former chorus girl, wife of Ireland's premier duke, and central figure in the recent near-tragedy in a cheap Brixton lodging house, was remanded until Monday at her trial in police court today for attempted suicide. A police inspector testified that the "Mr. Williams," a chef with whom the duchess reputedly was living in Brixton. told him they had quarreled about their radio, and that he had smashed the in-

Will Puzzled Bn I nited Press BEVERLY HILLS, Cal., April 11.—Will Rogers, famous humorist, said today that he is unable to decide whether to run for Governor in California, Oklahoma or Nevada. Informed that “a bunch” of California Democrats had banded to urge him to enter the gubernatorial race, Will inquired: * “How many Democrats make a bunch?” “Two,” he was told. “I'm awful glad it was the Democrats who picked me,” Rogers said, “because T. sure would be exclusive. I’m sure to be nominated. All the Republicans are running. However, I was sort of figuring on running in Oklahoma, and there’s Nevada to be considered.”

STOCK MART CLOSED Doors of Tokio Exchange Shut. Reports Say. Bn United Press SAN FRANCISCO. April 11.—The doors of the Tokio Stock Exchange, financial center of Japan, were closed today, according to cable dispatches received by the JapaneseAmeriean News here. Officials ordered the cessation of operations, it was said, when opening time showed a dead standstill in business. GROCER K£ART VICTIM William Williams Dies Suddenly in Brother’s Store. William Williams. 58. of 2938 Ruckle street, dropped dead early today while waiting on a customer in a grocery ODerated by his brother. H. B. Williams, at 1043 North West street. Coroner C. H. Keever. who ordered the body sent to city morgue, said he believed death was due to heart disease.

strument after the dispute. Williams summoned the police to the apartment and the duchess was discovered nearly unconscious from gas fumes. The magistrate, Intimating that he did not care to have her at large without proper supervision, expressed concern about who was going to take care of her. a a a COUNSEL for the duchess pleaded not guilty to the charge and asked for a further remand so he could call several

INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1930

MAYO FORTUNE OF $13,000,000 FOR HUMANITY Noted Surgeons Put Selves on Wage of Less Than Half of Income. Bn NBA Service NEW ORLEANS, April 11.—'The millions of dollars that Drs. William and Charles Mayo have made through their world-famous clinic at Rochester, Minn., will not go to their families when the two great surgeons die. Instead, this money—the “holy money.” as the brothers call it, now totaling in the neighborhood of $13,000,000 —'will be dedicated to humanity’s service through the Mayo Foundation of Medical Education and Research, affiliated with the University of Minnesota. Meanwhile, the two brothers have put themselves on “salaries,” which do not amount annually to nearly half of their incomes. All of their incomes above these salaries goes to the foundation to train surgeons for the future. Ends Vacation Trip Dr. William J. Mayo discussed this matter with a newspaper man for the first time in the cabin of his gasoline cruiser, the North Star, just before he started back north at the conclusion of a winter vacation trip. He goes back more than thirtyfive years to begin the story. “By 1894,” he begins, “my brother and I had paid for our homes. Our clinic was on its feet. Patients kept coming. Our theories seemed to be working out. The mortality rate among our cases was satisfyingly low. Money began to pile up. To us it seemed to be more money than any two men had any right to have. Put Aside Half “We talked it over a lot, that year of 1894. Then we came to a decision. That year we put aside half of our income. We couldn’t touch a cent of that half for ourselves. I know it may sound mawkish, it may sound like egotism and arrogance, when it was none of those things—but that money seemed, somehow, like holy money to us. “From 1894 onward we never have used more than half of our incomes on ourselves and our families; latterly, much less. My brother and I have both put ourselves on salaries now. The salaries are far less than half our incomes. We live within them. Back to Humanity “That holy money, as we call It. had to go back into the service of the humanity that had paid it to us.” Although Dr. Mayo would not discuss the amount of this money, it was learned that it now exceeds $13,000,000. “We try to take up the medical and surgical education of selected and promising men where the state leaves off,” he says. “My interest and my brother's interest is to train men for the service of humanity. “What can I do with one pair of hands? But if I can train 50 to 500 pairs of hands, I have helped hand on the torch. And we have the hands to train—nearly 300 of them now with the Mayo foundation, and a waiting list of some 1,400. CLEMENCEAU’S BOOK RAPS UNITED STATES Diarmament Effort, War Debt and Treaty Policies Scored. Bn United Press NEW YORK, April 11.—A posthumous shot at the United States for failure to ratify the Versailles treaty and for insistence on payment of war debts is contained in the latest installment of Georges Clemenceau’s book, “Misery and Grandeur of Victory,” appearing in serial form in Collier’s. The book will be published Saturday by Harcourt, Brace & Cos. America’s attempts to promote international disarmament also came in for criticism from the late French statesman. Kick Left in Dobbin Bn Uniti and Press DKTROIT, April 11.—For the first time since one remembers when a man was in a Detroit hospital today suffering from injuries received when kicked by a horse. James Mortimer, the man, emploed in a blacksmith shop, will recover.

witnesses, including two doctors at the hospital to which the duchess was taken. A police inspector who testified that he found the duchess unconscious on tho floor in her night clothes gave the magistrate two postcards inscribed in the handwriting of the duchess,' one of which said, "Good-by all. I will be no more trouble to you.” Counsel suggested that the duchess only turned on the gas when the inspector entered the room. He said the duchess was conscious all the time the inspec-

POLICE ON TRAIL OF NEW SUSPECT IN BOMB KILLINGS

Marion Blast Cases Linked With Hammond ‘Job’ After Identification of Danford. BY CHARLES E. CAItLL Times Staff Correspondent MARION, Ind., April 11.—Armed police squads today lay in wait near here for a man wanted on murder charges in connection with three mysterious bombings. Meanwhile detectives moved speedily to clinch the case against five men and a woman now under arrest. ' . In addition. Mayor Jack Edwards and William Dailey, Cincinnati detective, left here in a plane for the state prison at Michigan City, where they will quiz Harry Ames and Marwood Williams. The men are serving terms as perpetrators of the bombing of the State theater at Hammond two years ago. This action was taken after the identification Thursday night of Harry Danford, held here, as Joe Proda, who has been sought by police as the “pineapple expert,” alleged to have been the brains on the Hammond job. W. C. Taylor, investigator, and a Marion newspaper man left this afternoon for Chicago where police, while searching for Walter Mazurka, one of the chief suspects in the bombing case, arrested Teddy Trinka, a gangster, in possession of three sticks of dynamite. Trinka may be linked with the local bombings, police believe.

HOT WEATHER RECORD FALLS Mercury Hits 87 Degrees for April High. Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m 63 10 a. m 80 7a. m 64 11 a. m 83 Ba. m 70 12 (noon).. 85 9 a. m 75 Ip. m 87 t Temperatures that Thursday shattered all seasonal high records here, today climbed higher as the mercury ascended from 63 to 87 degrees from 6 until 1 p. m. At 4 p. m. Thursday thermometers at the United States weather bureau here showed 84.2 degrees, the hottest April 10 since 1879, when records first were kept by the local bureau. Previous high for April 10 was 77 degrees in 1910. The heat wave, which covered almost all of the middlewest, will continue here until Saturday night, the weather bureau forecast. Saturday probably will be somewhat cloudy in the Indianapolis vicinity, while showers in the northern part of the state are expected to reduce temperatures there. All-time seasonal heat records were broken at a dozen or more cities in the central states Thursday. Chicago recorded 90.2 degrees at 3 p. m. Among points reporting heat records broken were St. Louis, with 92 degrees; Milwaukee, 90; Kansas City, 92; Omaha, 92; Peoria, 92, and Des Moines and Dubuque, la., 92. Hayes and Phillipsburg, Kan., were the hottest places in the country with 98-degree weather. FIRST - CENSUS FINISHED Enumeration at Roann, Ind.. Shows Loss of 19 Residents. WABASH, Ind., April 11.—Roann, the first town in Wabash county to complete the 1930 census enumeration, has lost nineteen residents since the 1920 figures were gathered, according to John O. Campbell, Marion, census supervisor for the district. Roann’s preliminary figures, subject to revision, shows the population of 395. In 1920 it was 414. 3-STORY FALL TRIFLE Child, Unhurt, Cries for Little While, Resumes Play. CHICAGO, April 11.—A fall from a third-floor apartment window was a small matter to Edward Panek. 3. He cried a little while, and then resumed playing. Noted British Distiller Dead EAST GRINSTEAD, SUSSEX. England, April I.l—Lord Dewar, head of the great Dewar distilling interest, died suddenly at his home today.

GHOST DEFENSE LAID Attic Slayer in Love Cast to Plead Hypnotism. Bu United Press LOS ANGELES, April 11.—Paul Sanhuber, who for eighteen of his 35 years lived in the attics of the various residences of the Oesterreich family, will contend he was under an hypnotic influence when he murdered Fred Oesterreich. wealthy garment manufacturer, here, eight years ago, his attorney announced today.

tor was applying artificial respiration and only lost consciousness because the inspector “rubbed too hard." The inspector testified that the duchess had not responded to treatment for twelve minutes, after which she still was unconscious for twenty minutes more. When she began to recover, he testified, the duchess said to Williams, ‘‘You brute, there was no reason to send for the police. You are trying to ruin me.”

Entered ns Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis

i Police here, armed with machine and shotguns, seek a man who is said to have been in on bombings that took five lives here in six months and attempted to arrange for a Newport (Ky.) gang to come here for a planned job. It was on this job tha’ police arrested those now held. According to information, the hunted man wrote letters to bomb racketeers in Newport and asked them to come here. They are said to have replied they had “enough of this hot spot and wouldn’t take the job for less than $1,000.” To Be Questioned Ames and Williams will be questioned about Proda in an effort to get them to say whether or not he is the man referred to by them as the one who double-crossed them. Theft of about $200,000 worth of radios from the United States Radio and Television Company here last fall became linked with the bombing case today when it was learned that Mazurka may be wanted here on the radio thefts. At the same time Carl Becker, former traffic manager of the radio company, was attempting to obtain bond for his release from the Grant county jail where Becker is held, awaiting trial on grand larceny charges next month. Three new grand larceny affidavits were to be filed this afternoon against Becker. Total bond for his release was expected to be increased to $17,500. Two hammond men who are said to have worked with Danford during his alleged connections with the theater bombing are on their way here to identify Ranford further. They are guarded heavily. The story told by the Hammond residents clinches the one told police and detectives, seeking solution of the murders here, by an undercover man, who handled the arrest plant on the live men held here. The informant said he and Danford recently drove past the wrecked State theater and Danford pointed, it out as one of “his Jobs.” Five Others Are Held Here with Danford are Joseph Beckett and Peter Kmieciak of Chicago, and Vernon and Duke Humphrey of Elwood and Mrs. Erma Legos, widow of Andrew Legos, union ' : leader, who was blown to bits in a bomb exploded when he ste 1 on the starter of his car. Pri< jo that, three men were killed when the labor temple here was blasted by a bomb. Later John .Ashcraft was killed in the same manner that Legos met his death.. The situation now is without the shadow that it carried a few days ago when persons were inclined to dcubt the story told by the informant. The undercover man made the arrangements with the “boomers” to meet them here and pay them $350 to put a bomb in an auto, planted by police. Before leaving, Mayor Edwards granted writ for a change of judge to hear preliminary examination of Mrs. Erma Legos, charged with murder, whose husband was one of the bomb victims.

BANDITS RAID BANK Kill One in Fusillade of Machine Gun Bullets. '</ United Press FIQUA, 0., April 11.—Four jxandits, spraying adjoinirg buildings with machine gun and shotgun fire today, killed one man, injured two others and robbed the Citizens National Bank and *Tru<t Company of approximately $5,500. Heni*y Matthews, who stepped out of his store some distance away when he heard the firing, was shot in the chest by a stray bullet and died on the way to the hospital.

STANLEY WILLIAMS, a cleanshaven young man, testified that he and the duchess had quarreled over a radio set, whereupon he smashed the set and left the room. He returned in about five minutes, he said, to find the duchess with her head in the oven. “I picked her up and put her on the bed,” he continued. “About 2 o’clock she started raving like a lunatic and tried to strangle herself.” “You’re a liar,” the duchess interposed heatedly. “The doctor was there and knows I didn't.”

FAST MAIL TRAIN PLOUGHS INTO BIG BUS; 10 ARE KNOWN KILLED; SEVEN FEARED DYING Impact Shatters Motor Carrier and Scatters Passengers Along Tracks; Wreckage Catches Afire, Charring Bodies. NONE OF 27 IN CAR IS UNINJURED Survivor Says Driver Slowed to Permit Santa Fe Flyer to Pass, Then Suddenly Leaped Directly in Path of Engine. Bu United Press ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., April 11.—A heavy toll of life was taken in the collision of a fast Santa Fe mail train and a Pickwick-Greyhound bus near here today. Ten were known dead and seven were feared dying from their injuries shortly before noon. Twenty-seven passengers left Los Angeles at midnight Wednesday on the bus. Not a single one escaped death or injury. Identification of the dead and injured proceeded slowly because of the fact that no records were kept of the passengers.

PARKER STILL HOOVER CHOICE Refuses to Withdraw Name Despite Pressure. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, April 11.—President Hoover has been importuned by high officials in the Republican party to withdraw the nomination of John J. Parker to be associate justice of the supreme court, but has declined to do so, the United Press learned today on reliable authority. Vice-President Curtis, it is understood, was one of those who called the matter to Mr. Hoover’s attention, but he declined to discuss his White House visit. It is understood a number of staunch Republican senators may oppose confirmation of Parker. Sentaor Goff (Rep., Va.) has received numerous protests from his state and is inclined to break party ranks for the first time. Senator McCulloch (Rep., O.) and Senator Kean (Rep., N. J.), both staunch party men, are reported in line to join Goff. If such a formidable phalanx should be arranged against Parker in the senate, he would be rejected overwhelmingly, since he will be opposed by Democrats and Indepen-dent-Republicans. The farm bloc fight against Parker is expected to be led by Senator Borah (Rep., Idaho), who started the spectacular debate against confirming Charles Evans Hughes as chief justice. AIRPORT BIDS SOUGHT Park Board Approves Plans for Runways, Strips at Field. Plans for runways, taxi strips and other improvements at the city airport were approved today by the board of works on recommendation of Paul H. Moore, city superintendent. The estimate of Airport Engineer M. G. Johnson on the cost of remaining work at the field was $177,000 for concrete and $192,000 for asphaltic concrete. Bids were asked by the board.

SPEED RACER RESTS Kaye /Don Through for Year, Observers Believe. Bu United Press DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., April 11. Kaye Don announced this morning he would make no attempt to set a world automobile speed record in his big racing car to There was a well-defined fee\ g here that Thursday’s performance, when a speed of 182 miles hour was the best he could attain, marked Don’s last effort and that he would abandon his attempts for the year. BAD COINS PASSED HERE Counterfeit Half Dollars Received by Several City Persons. Passing of a number of counterfeit 50-cent pieces in Indianapolis was reported today. Mrs. Cabron Lewis, 936 North Grant street, reported to police a man and boy, selling cottage cheese from an old truck, gave her a counterfeit half dollar in change and that a number of other residents of her neighborhood were defrauded similarly.

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Many of the dead were mangled. Articles of luggage and other marks of identification were destroyed by fire which broke out in the wreckage of the bus. One survivor said that all passengers saw the train approaching for some distance. The driver slowed down as he neared the crossing to let the train pass., he said. Suddenly the bus leaped forward djrectly in the path of the engine. Whether the driver accidentally hit the accelerator instead of the brakes was not known. The driver was supposed to have been killed in the crash. The impact of the heavy train shattered the bus and scattered occupants along the tracks. After the crash the wreckage caught fire, according to information received here. Flames spread for yards around the wreckage and charred the bodies of the dead, making identification practically impossible. FIVE DEFENDANTS GET HEAVY PRISON TERMS Bandits in Baking Company Holdup Handed Ten Years Each. Five defendants received heavy sentences when tried today on burglary and robbery charges Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Paul Pierce, 20, and Donald Joseph, 22, alleged bandits who held up and robbed Walter Friehofer, head of the Friehofer Baking Compnay, of SSOO on March 10, each received determinate sentences of ten years at the Indiana state prison. Both are on parole from the state reformatory. Mont Henry, alias Bob Scott, 32, drew a ten-year determinate sentence when convicted of burglary and grand larceny. He is charged with stealing $153 in clothing from the room of James Walters, in a downtown hotel, March 3. Benjamin Brookshire, 30, and Carl Williamson, 24, were sentenced to the state reformatory for one to ten-year terms. They pleaded not guilty to stealing sls in merchandise from the store of James Zivien. 860 East Sixty-third street, Dec. 30. FEAR OF WORLD END RELIEVED BY SAVANT Scientist Claims Energy Used by Universe Is Replaced. £!v United Pres* NEW YORK, April 11.—Any professional pessimist who has been worrying over scientists’ predictions that the world will dlstintegrate in several hundred million years will fin, comfort in what Dr. Robert A. Millikan told a group of scientists Thursday night. Dr. Millikan of the California Institute of Technology and one of the great world figures in the field of science, said recent discoveries had convinced him that there is in the univer.se a continual process of upbuilding, and that energy continually is replaced. He cited ten discoveries of the last century which led to his hypothesis that an upbuilding process existed parallel with the destructive one. PARKS TOUR FOR LESLIE Governor Leaves With Lieber on April 16 for Inspection. Governor Harry G. Leslie and Richard A. Lieber, head of the state conservation leavq Indianapolis on the of April 16 for a four-day ins&® tion tour through Indiana’s state parks forests. Lieber said he invited Governor Leslie to make the trip to see the improvements made during the winter in preparation for the state crowds that soon will flock to the narks.