Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 June 1930 — Page 9
Second Section
Five City Swimming Pools Will Be Opened Formally on June 16
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Two views of the new Garfield park swimming pool, with modem purification equipment.
WABASH TO BE HOSTOFG. A. R. State Encampment to Be Opened Monday. B’l Times Special WABASH, Ind., June 3.—Bent, gray men, who were “boys in blue" three score years ago, will be here four days beginning Monday, for the fifty-first, annual encampment of the Indiana department, Grand Army of the Republic. In connection with the veterans meeting, there will be sessions of bodies allied with the G. A. R.—the Women's Relief Corps, Ladies of the G. A. R„ Daughters of Union Veterans, Sons of Union Veterans and the latter’s auxiliary. Department Commander Hale of Logansport, here for a conference with committees arranging for the meeting, was emphatic in denying that the 1930 encapment will be the last. He declared there would be sessions so long as a veteran is living in Indiana. The annual campfire, outstanding event of gatherings of the veterans, will be held Wednesday evening, June 11, and will be broadcast from WOWO. Ft. Wayne. Dr. James Wilson will act as toastmaster. Mayor Homer T. Showalter of Wabash will deliver an address of welcome. The principal speaker will be Fredrick Landis of Logansport, newspaper editor. Music will be provided by the forty-piece G. A. R. fife and drum corps, and the band of the Knightstown Soldiers and Sailors Orphans home. A parade will be held Wednesday afternoon with Jesse Price as marshal. It will be broadcast by WOWO and motion picture news cameramen will record it. ZEAL OF BONDSMAN PROVES BOOMERANG Becomes Defendant After Faking Charge to Hold Woman. B’l United Press NEW YORK, June 3.—Rosso Cardone, 35, a law clerk, became a defendant today because he was overzealous in protecting a bond which he had made, police reported. Cardone encountered Marie Smith, for whom hr had provided bail recently and who had failed to put in appearance when her case was called. The law clerk took the woman around to a police station and asked to have her locked up. He didn’t have a warrant for her arrest, however, and the sergeant was about to dismiss her when Cardone decided to charge her with stealing his pocketbook. He admitted today, ar ording to police, that he had trumped up the charge in order to have the woman held. ‘Y’ CAMP PICNIC SLATED Reunion Scheduled June 15 Prior to Regular Bedford Opening. In preparation for the opening of the state Y. M. C. A. camp at Bedford for the eighth season, the camp committee is arranging a reunion and get-together picnic to be held at the camp Saturday afternoon. June 15. A. H. Godard, local camp representative, is urging families of Indianapolis boys to attend. Present indications are that the camp will be open throughout the summer. The annual Camp Bedford committee meeting will be held in connection with the reur’ n. HURT IN CAR MISHAP Negro Suffers Skull Fracture When Run Down by Auto. Issac Campbell. 45, Negro, 806 Athon street, was in serious condition at tfie city hospital today suffering from a skull fracture sustained when he stepped in front of a car at New York street and Eastern avenue, driven by Glen Summers, 94 De Quincy street. Campbell was employed with the Indianapolis Water Company when the accident occurred. The driver was not held. Funeral Held for Suicide COVINGTON. Ind.. June 3. Funeral services were held here Monday for James Berto, 46, Stringtown. south of Covington. Berto. a coal miner, committed suicide by shooting himself through the head at his home Saturday. Relatives
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Garfield Park Tank to Be Dedicated by Citizens of South Side. Formal opening of five municipal swimming pools will be staged by the city recreation department on June 16, Recreation Director David S. Kilgore announced today. The new Garfield pool for south side citizens probably will be dedicated formally on June 14 with an appropriate program. City officials and south side leaders will participate in the dedicatory exercises. The pool is modern in every respect and is located in Garfield park, near the shelter house. It replaces the Ringgold pool which was abolished last year as result of tests showing the water impure. Holds 300,000 Gallons It was constructed at a cost of $45,000 by Frank Hunter, Indianapolis architect and builder of swimming pools. The pool holds 300,000 gallons of water of government drinking specifications and is 75x100 feet in dimensions. It has a ten-foot diving tower and under-water illumination for nocturnal swimming. Dressing rooms for the new pool are installed in the basement of the Garfield park shelter house, with entrance to the pool proper through a subway from the shelter house. Instruction to be Gtfen All municipal pools have been put in condition since the close of last season, and modern chlorinating systems have been installed in Willard and Ellenberger pools at a cost of $1 100 each. Rhodius and Douglas pools already have the necessary equipment for purifying the water, Kilgore said. An institute of instruction will be held at Brookside Community house. June 12 to 14, for the ninetyfive supervisors and instructors who will be named Thursday by the park board. Charles Wells, drama organizer for the Recreation and Playground Association of America, will lecture on dramatics; Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city sanitarian, will discuss first-aid and hygiene, and other recreation leaders will give instruction in pageantry, games and story telling. DELAWARE ST. BIDS ORDERED Works Board Strives to Rush Improvement. Bids on the improvement of the Delaware street bridge approach were ordered Monday by the works board in an effort to rush the development of the area north of the bridge which has been a thorn to motorists for several years. City Engineer A. H. Moore estimated the cost for asphalt paving of the approach and surrounding strips at $30,000. A monument to the pioneer women of Indiana will be built in the fifty-foot circle in center of Delaware street. Bids will be receiveed in fwo weeks and the contract let as quickly as possible. Moore conferred with the board relative to plans for widening Fortysixth street from Boulevard place to Meridian street, making it a crosstown thoroughfare. The sectioh will be widened from fifty to eighty feet before valuable properties are built to the present property line. Cost of property is estimated at $20,000.
‘FLYING COP’ TO GO ON TRIAL JUNE 10
Charges of conduct unbecoming an officer were filed against patrolman Earl Halstead. Indianaoplis "flying cop,” today by Don O. Owens Jr., second lieutenant in the Pour hundred forty-ninth infantry reserve. The safety board set tria’ tor June 10. A complaint charged that Halstead made insulting remarks to Lieutenant Owens on Massachusetts avenue last Wednesday and detained him at No. 8 engine house until Ft. Benjamin Harrison authorities ordered his release. i The complaint alleged that Balst#d appeared undea the inductee oPliquor, but Halstejtd denied Jp*
The Indianapolis Times
POSSE TRAPS BANKRGBBER One of Michigan Gang Is Caught Near Swamp. By United Press MANCELONA. Mich.. June 3 One alleged member of the gang which Monday afternoon held up and robbed the Mancelona State bank was captured early today by state police as he attempted to leave his hiding place in a swamp six milt > north of here. He surrendered without a fight and gave his name as Sylvester Elliott of Kalamazoo. He was captured by state police officers who were patrolling a highway, according to Captain L. A. Lyons of the state police. Captain Lyons later said Elliott had confessed he was a member of the gang which robbed the bank. He is said to have stated but four men instead of five participated in the robbery. Arrest of the other three was expected momentarily as troopers, deputy sheriffs and citizens beat through the swamp’land and brush near where Elliott surrendered. For two hours Monday possemen fired on a house outside Bellaire, Mich., only to learn that the sole occupants were two of their own number, who had taken refuge believin'? they were pursued by the bandits. FUNERAL RITES SET FOR MISS WALKUP Teachers College Faculty Member Dies at Long Hosp’tal. Students and faculty of Teachers college of Indianapolis paid respects today to Miss Mary Elizabeth Walkup, 60, teacher of English and psychology, who died at the Robert W. Long hospital Monday after an illness of several weeks. Funeral services to bs held at New Ross, Ind., Wednesday will be attended by instructors of the college. Miss Walkup had been on the Teachers college staff about twelve years. She formerly taught school in Crawfordsville. She is survived by a niece, Miss Elizabeth Long, also a teacher in the college here. ACTRESS SEEKS DIVORCE Director Husband Charged With Ejecting Wife From Apartment. LOS ANGELES, June 3.—Riza Royce, film actress, said her director husband, Josef Von Sternberg, made “contemptuous” remarks about her, when she filed a petition for divorce. The director further was charged with having ejected his wife from their Hollywood apartment May 11, and to have caused her such “great mental anguish” that she retired to a Long Beach health res'ort. 'SUGAR KING’ IS VICTOR Court Ruling on Supplies for Hlicit Liquor Making Gets Blow. By United Press CLEVELAND, June 3.—The supreme court decision outlawing the sale of supplies for the illicit manufacture of liquor received a blow ’-.ere Monday when United States Commissioner M. J. Monahen ordered 300,000 pounds of corn sugar, se'en automobiles, 3,650 unused five gallon cans returned to Leo lasai Akron, 0., “sugar king.”
board that Halstead arrested the officer, telling him that he had no right vo wear an army uniform. Charges of neglect of duty were filed against patrolman Homer Daily by Police Chief Jerry E. Kinney, afte • ~ 'ly was found asleep at 825 M nusetts avenue while on duty. /iiarges of absence without leave were filed against George McCloskey, city fireman at pumper company No. 26. Patrolman Ernest Whitsett was promoted to detective sergeant on recommendation of Kinney to fill a vacancy created by demotion of SSL’S
INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1930
STATE TAX ON INCOME URGED BY ATTORNEY Indiana Could Raise 15 Millions Annually, Says Insull Aid. COMMITTEE IN SESSION Fourth of Series of Public Discussions on Revenue Problems Is Held. An income tax law that would produce $15,000,000 annually was proposed to the state tax survey committee today as a forward step in solution of Indiana’s taxation problem, by John Lawyer, Chicago attorney, representing Insull interests, at a hearing in the statehouse. The meeting was the fourth of a series of public discussions on recommendations for improvements in the taxing system, and will be continued Wednesday morning. “The income tax field already is well taken up by the federal government,”’ Lawyer said, “but a carefully adjusted state law could be created that would not magnify the burden excessively. “The amount that can be raised by the income tax is limited by the fact that the federal government imposes an annual burden approximately $25,000,000 on Indiana incomes, and by the amount of taxable income which may be made to bear the burden. The reports available from federal income tax sources show a net taxable income in Indiana of about $500,000,000. Millions Could Be Raised “A state law imposing an average rate of 3 per cent could be passed that would produce approximately $15,000,000.” Lawyer suggested that the following exemptions be included in the law: SI,OOO for a single man; $2,000 for the head of a family, and S2OO for each dependent under 18 years of age. “A tax on intangibles also was suggested by Lawyer as a possible solution of the taxation problem. “Inequalities in the present taxing system are laid largely to the fact that intangibles generally escape taxation,” he said. “This could be remedied by providing an enforceable tax law. “Such law would add approximately $1,000,000,000 worth of property to the tax duplicate in two years. “Both the income tax law and intangible tax law would require constitutional admendment before they were in working order. “If an income tax law were created, placing the ievy at four mills on the dollar, approximately $4,000,000 would be added to the state’s revenue,” Lawyer said. Four Changes Suggested Lawyer contended that the only plan for changing the system without a constitutional amendment would be to reorganize administration of tax laws. He suggested four changes: 1. Give the state tax board jurisdiction of all corporations with gross income exceeding SIOO,OOO per annum or assets exceeding $50,000, and give local assessors jurisdiction over small corporations. 2. Abolish township assessors and assess property by county assessors through deputies appointed by them. This would increase efficiency and better equalize tax burden. 3. Consolidate small counties and decrease the total number from ninety-three to fifty or sixty. 4. Limit taxing units and rates. There should not be more than the following taxing agencies: State, county, township, city or town, and school district.
NEGRO FAILS TO PASS NAVAL ACADEMY TEST Freshman at Columbia University to Try Again Next Year. By United Press NEW YORK, June 3—William Chisholm, 17, Negro freshman at Columbia university, who sought to enter Annapolis, today announced he had failed to pass the examinations for the naval academy sevP'po T WPPk? offo Chisholm said the failure was his own fault and that he probably would try again next year. He is the first Negro in fifty-six years to have had an opportunity to enter Annapolis. SENATE ‘SLUR’ UPHELD Court Holds Member Can Not Be Punished for Remarks on Floor. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 3.—The constitutional provision that congressmen may not be questioned outside c *ngress for their remarks on the house and senate floors was invoked by the district court of appeals late Monday in upholding the district supreme court’s dismissal of a slander suit against Senator Couzens (Rep., Mich.). The suit against Couzens was wrought by a tax consultant, Howe P. Cochran. He contended statements Couzens made about him in the senate reflected on his character and were not spoken in line with the senator’s official duties. Coluribus Man Dies Bv Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., June 3.—Edward Crane 56, died at his home here after a three months’ illness. He was a lifelong resident of Bartholomew county. He was a member of the Christian church and of the Odd Fellows lodge. He leaves a daughter, Mrs. Beatrice Robbins; a brother, William Cfene. and stepmother, Mr. James H. Crane, East
8A Graduates of School 67
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Arthur Brown, Verden Dawson, Alexander Petrovich, Marion Turner, Roy llaverly and Hugh Long.
Edna Coyle. Mary Liebenderfer, Audrey Jones, Ruby Montgomery. Dorothy Phipps and William Troutman.
Layman McMann, Clarence Gentry, Marion Bughcr, William Schcrie, Byron Arnold and Walker Bade.
Crystal Baugh, Etta Marsh, Lulu Zoitos, Ressie May Houston, Wilma Gruca and Ida May Marsh
Thelma Guseking, Cecil Coffman and Dale Haley.
TARIFF ‘OF REASON’ IS LUDLOW CHOICE
Indianapolis Congressman Undecided as to Vote on Grundy Bill. Btl Times Special WASHINGTON, June 3. Although he favors a “reasonable” tariff bill, Representative Louis Ludlow of Indianapolis still is undecided as to how he will vote on. the Grundy law, when the showdown roll call comes on the conference report. “I will approach it with open mind and withhold decision until the biff takes definite shape and I can make a close study of its provisions,” Ludlow said today. “I am now, as always, for a tariff that will afford reasonable protection to the manufacturers of the country as well as to the producers on the farm. I mean by that such a fair and reasonable measure of duties as was advocated by both of the great political parties in their 1928 national platforms, and as President Hoover had in mind when he called the special session of congress last year to revise the tariff. “Insofar as an individual member is permitted by the rules of tariff revision to express himself by separate votes on individual items, I have tried to do my part to hold the Hawley-Smoot bill down to this ideal of tariff revision and to prevent excesses from being written into the measure.” Ludlow pointed out that he was on record in favor of free lumber, free shingles, and a tariff of only 6 cents a hundred pounds on cement, against the rate of 8 cents adopted by the house. But he is disposed to vote for the Grundy bill if a satisfactory arrangement of the disputed administration provisions can be worked out in the senate. “I believe that is the sort of tariff Indianapolis wants,” he said. ROYSE~ IS SELECTED Named Grand Knight of Indianapolis Council of K. of C. Selection of John A. Royse as grand knight of the Indianapolis council 437, Knights of Columbus, was announced today following the annual election Monday night. Other officers are George Hoffman, deputy grand knight; Raymond Keogh, chancellor; John Minta, treasurer; Fred Strack, recording secretary; Joseph F. Sexton, advocate; Peter Hickey, inner guard; Walter Buchmann and Edward Holloran, outer guards, and William Schnorr, trustee. ANNUAL DINNER SLATED Board of Trade Schedules Event Thursday; Four New Members. Members of the Indianapolis Board of Trade will hold their annual complimentary dinner Thursday at 6 p m. in the Board of Trade building. Four new members of the board announce" l today are: Charles S. Rauh, president of the Belt Rail•oad and Stockyards Company; William A Brennan, real estate broker; William S. O'Connor of M. O'Connor & Cos., Inc., and Leo F. Welch of the Celtic Savings and Loan Association. Aged Farmer Dies Bv Times Sperial ANDERSON, Ind., June 3.—William C Pettigrew, 73, farmer, is dead following a long illness. He leaves a widow, Mrs. Olive Pettigrew; four children. Ferdinand S. Pettigrew. Mrs. Elsie Moore. Warren Pettigrew and Mrs. Mildred Biddle: a brother, Charles E. Pettigrew, and four sisters, Mrs. Dora Capper, Knightstown; Mrs. Etta Bills, Greenfield: Mrs. Luena Jones, Pendleton, and
Undaunted By Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind., June 3. Roland Bruin, Ft. Wayne garage mechanic, whose automobile killed four persons during a race at Funk’s speedway, Winchester, Friday, intends to continue-his career as a speed pilot. The driver, who has had about three years’ race experience, declares the tragedy was unavoidable, blaming it on a blowout of one of the rear tires of his machine.
ORR GETS HIS LAWDjPLOMA Finishes Study as Son Ends High School Course. It was father and son day, scholastically, at the home of Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner of the state board of accounts, today as one celebrated graduation from law school and the other planned to receive his high school diploma. Orr Monday night received the degree of bachelor of laws from the Benjamin, Harrison law school, with one of the highest averages of his class. He is 49 years old. His son, John Lawrence Orr, 17, Wednesday will be graduated from Shortridge high school, and plans also to study law. Orr, connected with the board of accounts eighteen years, says he expects to practice law, especially municipal law. “You’re never too old to go to school,” he said, fondling his sheepskin. “Os course, you have to make many sacrifices. Going to school at night cuts off your social activities and interferes with your family life. But it’s worth it.” OPEN MEMBERS DRIVE Two Teams Competing for Realtors’ Board Contest Prizes. Two teams will compete for prizes in a membership contest begun today by the India napolis Real Estate Board. A team headed by H. M. Stackhouse will compete with the board’s membership committee under the direction of Robert Stockwell. A dinner will be given the winning team. At present the board has 158 active members, 131 associate members and 37 junior members. SUES ‘DOC’ FOR KISS Pretty Patient Asks $25,000 Damages of Ohio Patient. Bu T Prr'fi* CLEVELAND, June 3.—A jury today is to decide whether Dr. Leonard Kuttler attempted to kiss Mrs. Orville Butler, 26, a pretty patient, and if such an attempt is worth $25,000. Mrs. Butler alleges the physician made advanced following a physical examination and asks that sum. PLACED ON PROBATION Leniency Is Shown Clerk in $20,000 Theft After Misfortunes. Bu. United Press CHICAGO, June 3.—One year on probation was the legal punishment received by Daniel J. Lynch for embezzlement of $20,000 while he was actiDg chief clerk in the city controller’s office. After Lynch was charged with the crime his .wife died of a broken and kill eST r\; daugh-
Second Section
Entered ,-s Second-Cl*sa Matter at Postoffice, lodiaoapoila
ARSON TRIAL IS NEAR FINISH Damaging Evidence Against Maxwell Is Heard. The criminal court arson trial of Reese A. Maxwell, former grand juror, neared an end today as the state prepared to rest the case in which they seek to convict Maxwell of burning his home in March, 1929. One state’s witness remained to be heard as the trial adjourned for the noon hour after testimony of four final witnesses was heard during the morning. They include Lieutenant Robert Pollikan and William Kleis, firemen; Fred Koehne, state chemist, and Arlie Rigsby, manager of the insurance department of the defunct State Savings and Trust Company. Damaging evidence that the exjuror forced two persons to assist in the arson plot was heard by the trial jury, when the two persons turned state's evidence to testify they were threatened with prosecution and death unless they assisted in the burning. They are Mrs. Frances Lelota Miller and Roy Brown, indicted jointly with Maxwell in the plot. Both declare Maxwell prepared his home at 27 West Pleasant Run boulevard for the fire, in which their part was to ignite kerosene soaked rags placed in the house. The defense was expected to begin , its case late today. CITY MAN POISONED George Dransfield Dies on Fishing Trip to Ohio. A fishing excursion to Indian lake, near Bellefontaine, 0., terminated tragically today when George (Pete) Dransfield, 28, of 129 East Southern avenue, this city, died in a Bellefontaine hospital from food poisoning. Dransfield’s brother-in-law, Frank Cyrts, a Pentecostal minister of Cincinnati, his companion on the fishing trip, also was stricken with the poison and is near death in the hospital, dispatches say. Dransfield is survived by the widow, Mrs. Monda Dransfield; his father, John; three brothers, Oria, Raymond and Francis, and a sister, Mrs. Mabel Steffen, all of Indianapolis. The body was being returned to the home here today. cityTropsTfight on NEW FILLING STATION Lawyers Tell Judge Suit Has Been Settled Out of Court. Suit by the city to prevent erection of a filling station at College and Sutherland avenues has been settled out of court, it was learned today. Attorneys representing the city and the Lincoln Oil Refining Company, defendants, told Superior Judge Linn D. Hay that arguments in the suit, scheduled for today, will be deferred indefinitely., In the complaint the city and park board members held they have jurisdiction in permitting building of stations within' 200 feet of a boulevard. The proposed station, understood to be under construction, is near Fall Creek boulevard. ‘RESEARCH’ IS UPHELD Negro Preacher in Gambling Game Merely Getting Sermon Data. WASHINGTON, June 3. The plea that he who preaches against sin must know something about his subject won freedom from arrest for a North Carolina Negro minister here. The preacher, H. L. Dixon, was in a “numbers” gaming establishment late Monday when police raided it. He explained he was seeking material for next Sunday’s sermon. JaU Prisoner Kills Self WINCHESTER, Ind.. June 3. John T. Engle, 23, awaiting transfer to the state hospital for (he insane at Richmond, by
GANG ROUNDUP IS URUERED TU HALT WARFARE Chicago Hoodlums Nabbed in Wholesale Lots to Avert Slaughter. CAPONE’S AIDS CAUGHT Majority of Men Arrested Are Alien Sicilians: Nip Death Plot. By United Press CHICAGO, June 3.—Apprehensive lest wholesale massacres follow the flare up of gang warfare that took six lives over the week-end, police moved swiftly in a roundup of hoodlums and gunmen, and today, Chicago jails were crowded with suspects. Nearly 200 men, most of them alien Sicilians, were in custody early today, being held for scrutiny by federal immigration authorities who have been asked to resort to deportation wherever possible in order that Chicago may be ridded of undesirable persons. During the night, police squads cruised about the, city, moving in mass formation against places known to be haunts of gunmen and gang members. Two of Scarface A1 Capone’s gangsters were run down and captured in a sensational chase shortly after the big drive got under way. With another Capone henchman, who escaped, they were believed to be on their way to avenge the deaths of the three gangsters who died in a Fox Lake resort hotel Sunday morning as machine gun bullets raked a dining table where they were having a party. The three hoodlums, each driving his own car, were racing south on Clark street, when a police squad caught sight of them. In the chase that followed the second and third automobiles were headed off and pushed into the curb. Frank Diamond, in the first car, outdistanced the pursuing police machine and escaped. Israel Andelman, alias Alderman, former Detroit kidnaper, and Frank Foster were pulled from the other machines and taken to the detective bureau, where they admitted they recently transferred their allegiance from the George (Bugs) Moran gang to one of the gangs allied with that of Capone. McGurn Is Held Other notorious gangsters arrested included Machine Gun Jack McGurn, a Capone “big shot”; James Belcastro. reputed bomber, and Ralph (Chink) Avino, both known as Caponeites. The capture of Andelman and Foster brought from Stege the declaration that there was no doubt they and Diamond Joe were out on a job of killing. “The fact that Diar-zmd, one of Capone’s chief henchmen, was leading the way is proof of that,” said. Stege. “He had all the guns In his car, for there were none in the automobiles driven by Foster and Andelman.” The reprisals feared by police principally were in connection with the slaying of Michael Quirk, Sam Pellar and Joe Bertsch in the Fox Lake hotel.
SEEK NEGRO IN DEATH OF FORMER EMPLOYER Janitor D es After Four Shots Are Fired Into Body. John Bruner of 917 Edgemont street, was slashed severely on the head and face and was taken to city hospital Monday night. Police seek a man Bruner accuses of cutting him following a quarrel at Fall Creek and the canal. Joshua Simpson, 40, Negro, janitor at an apartment at 644 West Twen-ty-second street, was wounded fatally Monday night and police are seeking John Gasby, Negro, of 758 Edgemont street, his former helper, as the man who fired four shots into Simpson's body. Gasby’s resentment at warrants charging theft filed against him by Simpson caused the shooting, police believe. Simpson died at city hospital this morning. BACK BROKEN IN DIVE Man Hurt Critically Attempting to Imitate Carnival Act. Boasting to his wife that he could duplicate a high dive into a net at a street carnival at Northwestern avenue and Twenty-third street Monday night, William Johnson, 23, of Richmond attempted the feat and suffered a broken back. He is at city hospital in a serious condition. He leaped fifty feet from the ladder and struck a heavy rope at the net edge. ELECT NOLAND CHIEF Succeeds Sidney S. Miller as President of Service Club, Stephen C Noland was elected president of the Service Club at a luncheon te the Lincoln Monday to succeed Sidney S. Miller. Other officers are John Kautz, vice-presi-dent; Harvey Bradley, secretary: Neal Grider, treasurer, and Frank Moorman, sergeant-at-arms. CLUB TO NAME HEADS Call Is Issued by Albert Uhl, President of New Marion, Officers for the ensuing year will be elected by the New Marion Club Friday night in the clubrooms. twelfth floor Peoples bank. The call was issued by Albert E. Uhl. president. Those to be elected President, vice-president, secretarjg
