Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 294, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1930 — Page 3

efc-ffft W, T 9.

‘BANANA KID'IS FOUND GUILTY; GETS] 0 YEARS Kenneth Hunt Sentenced to State Prison for City Holdups. Found guilty of automobile banditry and robbery as the “Banana Kid" taxicab and grocery holdup bandit, Kenneth Hunt, 22, 1504 Blaine avenue, is in the Marlon county jail today awaiting transfer to the Indiana state prison to serve ten years. Hunt was found guilty of the charges in a verdict returned late Friday by a criminal court Jury. Special Judge Alvah Rucker immediately sentenced the bandit to the state prison to serve ten-year terms on each charge, running concurrently. Return of the guilty verdict was accepted in a matter-of-fact way by Hunt, but the bandit’s bride of four months. Mrs. Katherine Hunt, 31. screamed when the jury pronounced her youthful husband guilty. She had testified during the trial that her husband was with her on at least two occasions when he was accused of holdups. Hunt was arrested four days after his marriage to Mrs. Hunt.

The City in Brief

“Contact courses" for De Paow alumni was advocated today by the De Pauw Alumni Association, which met here Friday to play a campaign for adult education. The university is expected to inaugurate a system of adult study for alumni as a means of coimteracting the “four years and forget” attitude of some college graduates. Seventy-five per cent of the criminal cases in Marion county are last because of lack of adequate preparation by deputy prosecutors. Laurens L. Henderson. Republican candidate for prosecutor, charged at the meeting of the Second Ward Republican Club Friday night. Stuart Chase, economist. In an address Friday before, the Womans Department Club, told of Russia’s “five-year plan” in industry. “A united Republican party to return a Republican representative to congress is a fundamental need in the county,” declared Schuyler Mowrer, G. O. P. candidate for congress, Friday night at the meeting of the women’s auxiliary of the Republican Veterans of Indiana, incorporated. Members of Elks Lodge 13, of this city, will hold their inaugural ball and dinner-dance at the Elks Club tonight. Dinner will be served at 7:30 p. m.. and dancing will start at 9:30. Jack Berry's orchestra will play. -*The Psychology of Winning Men.” will be the subject of Earl R. Condor. vice-president of the Church Federation of Indianapolis, at a meeting of the Methodist Ministerial Association at 10 Monday at the Roberts Park M. E. church. Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam. president of De Pauw university and member of the Rotary Club of Greencastle, will address Rotartans in the Riley room. Claypool hotel. Tuesday at 12 15, on “The New Patriotism.” At the Srienteeh Club luncheon Monday at the Lockerbie, Lieutenant H. B Weeks, district photographer of the Curtis-Wright Flying Service, will tell of aerial photography as it applies to the engineer. A program of anthems, including “Hallelujah Chorus" from “The Messiah.” will feature Easter services at the Indiana Girls’ school. Clermont. Sunday morning. Dr. Kenosha Sessions, superintendent, has announced. EXTENSION IS LIKELY FOR WATSON ROAD Extension of Watson road from its present “dead end” to Maple Road boulevard was anticipated today following an offer of the JoseBalz Company to donate to the park board a twenty-five-foot strip along the Monon railroad. In consideration of the offer the park board appro-ed a filling station permit to the Highway Oil Company, on the west, side of the railroad at Maple Road boulevard. The extension of Watson road was blocked several years ago at a point 600 feet south of Maple road, when Jose-Balz refused to sell the property. Building Permits Mrs. W. C. Grimes, repairs, Guilford and Fairfield. *BOO. William H. Moore, filling station. Southeastern and Trowbridge, *3.700 W. F. Spadann. garage. 1718 North Delaware. *350. (f. Nichols, garage. 1054 West New York. 1250. Leonard Meisberger, storeroom, 1148 South West, S6OO. Bridges dr Graves, dwelling, garage. 5880 North Delaware. *6.000. Sarah Wilson, repairs, 2635 North Delaware, *450 William Humphrey, garage. 1916 Hoyt. Mrs. Mattie Foggs, garage, 3335 North Arsenal. *375. Cara U! 'm. repairs. 5046 Baltimore. $2lO. C R. Porter, garage. 3541 North Talbott. *2OO. E. F. Marburger, repairs. 817 East For-ty-second. *3OO. E. E. Newman, addition. 519 East Thirtyfourth. *I.OOO. Plane to Visit City A good-will airplane of the American Legion on a flight over the mid-west will stop in Indianapolis at 5 p. m. April 30. Legion officials announced here today. The plane will cany invitations to mayors and Governors to visit Boston during the national Legion convention next October. Aboard the plane will be an American Legion representative, a radio operator and a mechanic. O. L. Bodenhamer. national commander. will "greet the fliers when they arrive at national headquarters here.

Git i Evades Cannibals

' — *"* —

Like a thrilling chapter from a hair-raising adventure book Is the latest exploit of the Viscountess de Sibour, American girl, who was forced to land with her husband in their tiny Moth airplane in the midst of a cannibal tribe in Africa, but succeeded in starting the motor before being captured. The viscountess, daughter of H. Gordon Selfridge, American-born London merchant, and the viscount, with whom she is shown above, had previously visited Ras Safari. Abyssinian ruler, and were flying over tribal battlefields when the accident occurred. The couple gained fame a year ago w T hen they circled the globe in their tiny plane, shown below.

Know Your Library—No. 12

Boys, Girls Popularize Old English Chivalry

Knights of the Round Table hold rendezvous out on the west side: discuss the affairs of courts and queens, and settle their disputes by the sword. The King Arthur Club, for boys living near the Hawthorne branch library, 70 North Mount street, has popularized the medieval heroes. The club holds regular meetings at the branch and each member strives to keep his shield of honor clean by following the example of his knight. Girls of the neighborhood also resort to books as the medium that takes them back to days of chivalry. They live the times of Victoria and Good Queer. Bess over again at their poetry- club each week under direction of Miss Hazel Smith, assistant librarian. Reading with a purpose has caught the fancy of Hawthorne's older patrons, who continue their reading courses in psychology, biology, drama, literature, history and modern exploration from year to year. Gripping novels of the World war and interesting travel books also are in the spotlight of adult requests. About 55 per cent of the patronage is adult, while the rest of the clientele is made up of pupils from the Hawthorne public school, St. Anthony's parochial school and Washington high school. Mrs. Helen Miller is librarian. PAVING CONTRACTS ARE AWARDED BY BOARD Concrete to Be Laid Before June 1, According to Specifications. Contracts for the paving of Eighteenth street from Montcalm to Milburn streets and Forrest avenue from Washington to New York streets were awarded this week by the board of works. Concrete pavement will be laid before June 1. the date for completion specified by City Engineer A. H. Moore. The Eighteenth street project was awarded R. W. Bowen Company on low bid of $2,728 and the Forrest job to Indiana Asphalt Paving Company for $12,767. Resolutions adopted this week: Concord street from Michigan to Tenth, paving and curbing; Livingston avenue from first alleynorth of Walnut to Tenth street, paving, walks and curb: alley w-est. of Lansing street.. Michigan to alley south -of Michigan street, vacation. Japanese Diet to Meet By United Press TOKIO, April 19. — The fiftyeighth session of the iftioerial Japanese diet—the Teikoku Gi-Kai—-will be convoked Monday to discuss important questions and adopt pressing legislation left over from last January.

Island Hooch Brings Fiery Rage But Paralysis Prevents Violence

By Science Service CHICAGO. April l-i.—‘ ‘Ginger moon” paralysis, which ha* recently caused public health officials in some of the southern states a good deal of trouble, has an analogue in certain of the happy isles of the South Pacific. Only there the paralyzing effect of the local beverage is known and allowed for in advance, and its consequences are n<A so serious as they are in this country. The natives of the islands of western Polynesia, says Professor W. J. G. Land of the University of Chicago, make a drink called “kava” out of the root _ of the shrub Piper methysticum. a member of the pepper family. Professor Land had an opportunity to observe the peculiar effect of this potent variety qf home brew some years ago, when he was on a botanical exploration in the south Pacific region. The drink has two mutually opposing effects or its imbibers. When a man has taken a sufficient quantity of It. he becomes exceedingly quarrelsome, but at the same time he becomes completely para-

v * a w Mm >, w ■/ *

Mrs. Helen Miller

EGG HUNTS STARTED Events at Fall Creek and Riverside Open Program. The city-wide egg hunts in parks w-ere to open this afternoon with programs at Pall Creek playground and Riverside park at 2:30 p. m. Sunday's festivities will be held at 2:30 p. m. at Garfigld and Douglass parks. Mayor Sullivan and other .city officials will participate in the programs. Following the egg hunt for children there will be entertain- - ment programs. U. S. LINES TO BUILD FOUR BIG NEW LINERS Two of Proposed Ships Will Be 60.000-Ton Giants. Bu United Press SOUTHAMPTON, England. April 19. —Four new ships, casting SBO,000.000, and two of them 60.000-ton giants, capable of great speed and with decks for launching airplanes, are planned by the United States Lines. Joseph E. Sheedv, head of the lines, said here, the first two 30,000ton ships will be ready for the New York-Southampton service in 1932. Kept “Arsenal" in Home By United Press NEW YORK. April 19.—Marcel Lucas, 33, maintained a small arsenal in his home, police said. They found twenty-four fountain pens, adaptable for use for tear gas or firing revolver cartridges in his room.

lyzed from the waist down. He thus forms all sorts of hostile intentions, but is unable to move a step toward putting them into execution. When the men of a village prepare for a kava drinking party, Professor Land says, they seat themselves on the ground, leaning against the posts of one of their big circular huts. They maintain intervals that will just permit them, by stretching a bit. to pass a eocoanut shell full of the brew from hand to hancH-'l he shell goes round, replenished at proper intervals by girls who do not drink any of it themselves. The drinkers soon begin to grow intoxicated and quarrelsome. They curse each other out, to the extent that the limited Polynesian vocabulary of impoliteness will permit, and utter dire threats of mayhem murder. But their legs are helpless, so all the sound and fury signifies nothing. Presently the liquor finishes its work, and the drinkers topple over and tall asleep By morning their legs and tempers are all right again, and everybody goes off amicably to try his luck at fishing.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CHECK FURTHER ON RECORD OF BANDIT SUICIDE Escaped Convict, Who Shot Self Downtown, Former Car Thief, Burglar. Norman Flynn of Flint, Mich., was the name assumed here by Colon Bearup. 20, alias Delbert Williams, escaped Michigan convict, who shot and killed himself on a crowded downtown street Thursday night to escape capture by police aster a filling station holdup, police learned today. As Norman Flynn, the youth was a favorite with many girls, search of his effects here today revealed. Following identification of the body as that of Bearup from finger prints, Newton Shepherd. 1003 Oliver avenue, viewed the body at the Patterson imdertaking establishment and Identified it as that of the man known at the Oliver avenue address as Flynn. Michigan police records, received by police here today, show Bearup was arrested first when a lad of 15 on a theft charge and later was arrested on a burglary- charge. On July 26, 1926, he was arrested for theft of three automobiles in Flint and was sentenced to four to five years in the Michigan state reformatory. He escaped Aug. 5, 1929. His mother is dead, but his father resides in Michigan, police here were told. They are attempting to locate the father.

COURT RULE ON ALIEN ASSAILS RED DOCTRINES Citizenship of Hungarian Is Revoked for Reavowal of Communism. Hu Uailcd Prtss PHILADELPHIA. April 19. A’ions adhering to communistic principles t.re not wanted as citizens of the United States, the United States court of appeals ruled in effect in the case of John Tapolcsanyi, Hungarian, who conducts a barber shop in Herminie, Pa. He has been in the United States seventeen years. The court late Thursday revoked Tapolcsanyi’s citizenship. which he obtained in 1920 after he swore fealty to the Constitution of the United States. He had been arrested for treasonable utterances the previous year. A letter to his brother, a gendarme in Hungary, in which John accused him of being “a murderer of the proletariat” and in which he reavowed his Communism, led to the revocation of his citizenship. “While no one may be deeply attached to every provision of the Constitution,” the court ruled, “and while all citizens have a right to work for its amendment in an orderly way that is a right of a citizen, the. respondent approached that right, not as a citizen, but as an alien. As an alien, he had no such right." FUNERAL RITES ARE SET Services for Balser Fox, 77, Will Be Held at 9 Monday. Last rites will be held at 9 Monday in St. Philip Neri church for Balser Fox, 77, employe at the Broad Ripple boathouse sixteen years, who died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. George Brattain, 6059 North Carrollton avenue, following a short illness. Burial will be in St. Joseph cemetery-. A resident of Indianapolis fortyeight years, Mr. Fox was born near Hayden. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Brattain and Mrs. C. H. Smith, and two sons. Robert C. and August H. Fox, all of Indianapolis. The wife, Mrs. Barbara Young Fox, died several years ago. NATURE CLUB TO MEET Breakfast, Bird Walk to Follow Easter Sunrise Service. An Easter sunrise service will be held at 5:25 Sunday morning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Flanner, Cold Spring road, on the bluff overlooking White river, by the Nature Study Club of Indiana. William A. Myers will have charge es the service. Breakfast will be served following sen-ices and Mrs. Harry H. Coburn will have charge of a bird walk. Members will meet at the Riverside car, leaving Illinois and Washington streets at 5:06 a. m.

TAKES POISON AFTER QUARREL • WITHJHUSBAND City Woman Is in Critical Condition at City Hospital. Swallowing poison after a quarrel with her husband at 4 this morning, Mrs. Charlotte Webb. 21, wife of Wayne Webb, 26, of 322 North East street, is in a critical condition at city hospital. Webb, a taxi driver, told police he returned home at. 3:30 this morning to find his wife absent. Waiting outside, he told officers, he saw her return home in a car with two men and another woman. A battle between Webb and the men followed in which he alleges one of them attempted to strike him with a hammer. When he grabbed a jack handle from his car to return to the fray, the car sped away, he related. Waiting at the home again, Webb says the car returned and his wife got out of the machine. He followed her upstairs and a violent quarrel ensued, after w-hich she ran to a bathroom, locked the door, and swallowed the poison. He broke down the door to reach her side. Coroner C. H. Keever today re- : turned a verdict of suicide in the death of Mrs. Hazel May Poole, 37, i of 131 East Sixteenth street, who died at Methodist hospital Friday night from poison taken several weeks ago. Mrs. Poole, wife of Ira C. Poole, and daughter of Walter E. Dutton, also is survived by a sister, Mrs. Carl Meyers.

REDS PREPARING FOR EXHIBIT OF FULLSTRENGTH May 1 Will Be Signal for Nation-Wide Show; V. F. W. Counters. BY MORRIS DE HAVEN TRACY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 19.— I The organized forces of unrest plan to bring the recent w-eeks of demonstrations to a climax May 1 with a nation-wide display of strength. Their leaders claim the affair will exceed anything in this country since the agitation immediately following the war years. The nation-wide demonstration will be under the auspices of the Communist party of the United,, States. A counter demonstration in New York is being arranged by the Veterans of Foreign Wars who have obtained a permit tp use Union Square, favorite rallying ground of the Communists and the left wing of the labor movement. “We feel it is time to determine just what this movement aimed against our government and our institutions really amounts to,” explained Charles S. Pembum, spokesman for the veterans. “If it is a menace, we want to bring it out into the open. If it is not a- menace we want to know- whether w-e can laugh at It or ignore it. “If the Communists and their supporters are as strong as they claim to be, it hardly seems possible that they w-ill keep quiet when they find us stealing their May day party.”

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Empire Construction Company. 311 North Alabama street. Chevrolet coupe. 679-671. from Illinois and Sixteenth street. Claude Watson. Anderson. Ind., Buiek coach. 562-518. from 1716 North Meridian street. % John Holt, 321 West Michigan street, Ford coupe, 69-403. from 321 W’est Michigan street. Roy Benharr.. 2418 Park avenue. Ford coupe. 80-519, from 800 North Illinois street. Tenna Smith. 906 Marion avenue. Whippet coach. 758-009, from 1127 Shelby street. Kenneth Grav. 802 North Oakland avenue. Ford coupe. 92-711, from Senate avenue and Market street.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: j. C. Fisher. 2723 North Pennsylvania street. Hudson coach, found at West and TiDpecanoe streets. Pontiac roadster, no license, fbund at Belmont and Oliver avenues. ASK CANDIDATES’ STAND Farm Federation Questions Attitude on Calling Convention. The attitude of all candidates for the general assembly on the proposal to call a constitutional convention is the subject of a special questionnaire sent out by the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation. Candidates also are asked to pledge opposition to any measure which may increase property taxation. Marriage Licenses Otis A. Pace. 28. of 3021 North Arsenal. > laborer, aid Mary E. Williams, 19, of ; 1624 East Thirtieth, maid. A . Harold E. Curm. 34. of 4317 East V, ash- 1 ir.gton, superintendent, and Virginia w. Murray. 31, of 4317 East Washington | Howard Cobbs. 28. of 419 Blackford porter, and Georgena Collins, *7, of 969 CurMs j! a poindexter. 26. of Indianapolis, firemen, and Margaret L. Fisher. 21. of dentist, and Mabel Newton. 23. of <2o North Pennsylvania, typist Oliver F. Teague. 30, of 615 East Twentyfifth. butcher, and Marjorie L. Buckley, 22. of 1214 Ashland, Bus Fare Refunded Special bus sendee from Monument circle to Hoosier airport, Kessler boulevard and Lafayette pike, and to Capitol airport. West. Thirtieth street west of Lafayette pike, has been arranged for Sunday. Busses, which will have airport signs on them, will leave the circle at 1:15, 2:30, 3:45 and 5 p. m. Hoosier airport will refund bus fare of persons who take airplane rides, President Bob Shank announced.

Their Dad Rides Italy

L * - - - /' - . 11...

These two healthy-looking youngsters are sons of Premier Benito Mussolini, dictator of Italy. The cameraman caught Bruno and Vittorio Mussolini as they were watching a particularly interesting sport in Rome.

Learning to Fly—No. 6

Climbing Too Fast Cuts Speed, Air Pupil Finds

BY LOWELL NUSSBAUM Times Aviation Editor TODAY I had anew flying instructor, for a change, French Livezey replacing Bob Shank, my regular instructor, who was busy with another student. It being Livezey’s first trip up with me as a student and being rather uncertain as to how I would behave, he permitted me to practice several take-offs and landings, but kept a good grip on the stick, helping me out each time before I could put the plane in a bad position. With his manual, as well as oral, assistance, I managed to make several good take-offs and landings. Livezey found several serious faults with my “flying,” among these being my tendency to climb too steeply on the take-off and to drop the inside wing too low in banking on my turns at compartively low altitudes. “You must not climb too quickly or you may stall the ship,” he told me. Climbing too quickly reduces your flying speed. “When a plane stalls it will fall from 200 to 400 feet without control. If you are too near the ground when this happens then it is embarrassing. After you have been flying a, little you will be able to feel the plane start to stall, and immediately you will drop the nose nearer the flying angle. n n st "/\N yorr take-off push the stick vj forward to raise the tail. Then, in the flying angle, when you have reached a speed of about forty miles an hour, pull back on the stick. As soon as you leave the ground, level the plane off a little and climb it easily. “You must not bank too steeply, especially near the ground, as this causes the plane to slip earthward.” After this instruction, Livezey permitted me to practice what he had told me. The results were fairly satisfactory. Then he gave me some instructions along anew line. “As soon as the plane leaves the ground, you should begin looking for emergency landing spots,” he said. “It is important always to have a place picked out to land in case your motor should quit. This especially is true on the take-off. nun “'VTOU may not be able to see X an ideal spot to land, but be prepared to bring your plane down straight ahead, in case of engine failure, and land in the best spot possible. In this way you may damage your plane, but you probably will avoid injury. “With a motor properly checked and warmed before you take off, there is very slight chance of it quitting. “One important matter you must never forget is not to attempt to turn back to the field if the engine should quit. Just keep going straight, losing flying speed as you

Used Pianos —Big bargain* In ikopwom a6 slightly nrd Instrument* Term* a* Low a* 81 Week Pearson Piano Cos. 128-30 N. Pennsylvania Street "VONNE GUT’S Headquarter* for good gras* and garden seed*.. Only the best ingredients, no cheap substitution. YONNEGUT’S 120-124 E. Washington Street 3-ROOM OUTFIT Living room bedroom and kitchen complete. Rfcon-* MIQ ditloned v* 1 r EASY TERMS! Lewis Furniture Cos. United Trade-In Store 514 S. Meridian St. Phone Dr. 2*27 ALL NEW MODELS ATWATER KENT RADIO $lO Down—s 2 Weth Call IT* for Demonstration Public Service Tire Cos. IIS E. New York S*. Lincoln lUB

near the ground, arid land in the best spot available.’’ Following this, we took several more turns in the air. Then we taxied up to the hangar and I was another half hour nearer the stage when the school will be willing to trust me with one of its planes for a solo flight. BURGLARS RAID OTY HOME; LOOT IS $750 Tapestries, Clothing and JewelryArc Taken by Marauders. Fine tapestries, clothing, jewelry and other articles, valued at a total of $750, were stolen from the residence of Mr. and Mrs. John Steidle, 1408 Broadway, Apartment 4, Friday night, police were told, the burglary being discovered when they returned home early today. Burglars stolg; a large quantity of groceries from, the Ernest E. Tubbs store, 607 North Alabama street. Friday night, the. theft being discovered by a milk delivery man. . Joseph DesLauriers. 2254 North Capitol avenue. Shell filling station attendant at Capitol avenue and Twenty-first street, yielded s2l to a Negro baridit Friday night, he told police. PIONEER RESIDENT DIES Funeral Services for Mrs. W’f’iler Will Be Held Sunday. Funeral services for Mrs. Amy Waller, 90, Hortonville, pioneer of Hamilton county, who died at her home Friday morning, will be held at 2:30 Sunday in Sheridan Christian church. Burial will beat Sheridan. Survivors are four children: I. Hamilton, Lovell: Mrs. Harold C. Brooks, Indianapolis, and Perry Lovell and Mrs. Dora E. Pingle, Hortonville.

A $6,500 Home tA $6,500 home can be yours In from three to five years if yon will save from sls to $25 a month with Union National where 6% dividends have always been paid. $25 a month with these dividends will grow into a down payment of $387.24 in only three years. In five years sls a month will Increase to $1,049.80. Begin saving now and in the meantime choose your location ... a good one in Indianapolis will be an Investment in real estate of which you may be proud and in which you will be 6% Dividends iFor 39 Years We Charge No Membership Fees ASSETS $5,300,000.00 dSS Si. 5334.000.00 Union National Savings 6 Loan Assn North Side of Street— y 2 Block West of Postoffice 20 West Ohio Street

PAGE 3

BIG MAJORITY i VOTES REPEAL OF LAWS Wets Are Far Ahead of Rivals in Newspapers’ Prohibition Poll. By Scripps-IToward Xeictpaper Al Haney WASHINGTON, April 19.—Approximately three-fourths of those who have voted in the prohibition poll being conducted by The Times and other Scripps-Howard newspapers are in favor of repeal of the eighteenth amendment. Votes cast up to today total 23,137 in twenty-four cities, of which 18,272 favored repeal. Strict enforcement was favored by 2,173, and 2.692 voted for modification. The Scripps-Howard poll is being taken to check the poll of the Literary- Digest, which so far has indicated an overwhelmingly wet sentiment throughout the country. The voting coupon, which readers are invited to fill out, sign and bring or mail to the newspaper offices w-ill appear through Tuesday. The table below- gives the votes by cities. Additional figures will appear Monday: „ ,f Bpe L Ent Mod. Kep. Tot. Akron Tlmes-Press 80 96 515 691 Baltimore Post 21 54 447 532 Birmingham Post 208 181 638 1.017 Buffalo Times 16 130 502 638 Cincinnati Post 10 28 213 350 Cleveland Press 118 258 1,508 1,884 Columbus Citizen 91 101 573 78* Rocky Mountain News .111 107 606 824 El Paso Post 60 96 282 438 Evansville Press 21 19 448 488 Ft. Worth Press 98 77 253 438 Houston Press ..133 127 704 954 Indianapolis Times ....146 273 1,558 1,977 Knoxville News-Sent. .. 80 51 240 371 Mem. Press-Scimitar... 122 144 573 839 N. M. State Tribune 16 14 54 84 N. Y. Telegram 230 >B9 4,527 5,146 Oklahoma News 26 19 70 115 Pittsburgh Press 249 149 X.7o* J. 102 San Diego Sun 17 12 83 112 San Francisco News.. 82 90 628 1,000 Toledo News-Bee 61 85 1,108 1,254 Washington News 85 75 569 729 Youngstown Telegram .102 125 281 508 Totals are: Enforcement. 2,173; modification, 2.692; repeal, 18.273: grand total, 23.137. PROPHET DEGREE GIVEN 2,500 Witness Sahara Grotto Rites; 100 Candidates in Class. Exemplification of the veiled prophet degree at the Athenaeum Friday night was witnessed by more than 2,500 members of Sahara Grotto. A class of nearly 100 candiates took the degree. BUS SERVICE TO HOOSIER AND CAPITOL AIRPORTS (Sundays Only) Bus leaves Circle at 1:15, 2:30, 3:45 and 5:00 I*. M. Returning leave* Capitol Airport at 1:55, 3:10, 4:25 and 5:40 I*. M. Returning leave* Iloosier Airport at 2:00. 3:15, 4:30 and 5:45 P. M. Fare (one way) 25 cents Starting Sunday, April 20 PEOPLES MOTOR COACH COMPANY 'TT minimi m" " iibiTTi Norman* Blue BiTd Store Set qf BLUE BIRD DISHES f*n voua m cash or credo S&tfMts grr-24* fcasT yaft : EXPERT TRUSS FITTING AT 129 W WASH. ST. STORE Abdot inal Supports and Shoulder Braces HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS mi- ■■ 11 ■ ■<