Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1930 — Page 1
I j? SCfUPPS - HOWARD ]
Arab Abandons Film Riches for Native Desert Valentino Died of Broken Heart Over ‘Super,’ Lad Declares.
BY RICHARD DEVERN M’MILLAN United Pre* Stef! Correspondent BOU SAADA, Algeria, June 6. Disillusioned, saddened and tired of life in Hollywood, little Abdul Kada, an Arab boy whom Rex Ingram found in the desert and took to California, where he starred under Rudolph Valentino, has come back to the burning sands of the Sahara. In Valentino's film, “The Sheik,” Abdul showed promise and today, in spite of the talkies, he might have his palace with an outdoor swimming pool at Hollywood. Instead he is happy in bare feet on the hot sands to conduct American and British tourists to the sights along this fringe of the desert. ABDUL has a different story to tell of Valentino and his loves than those circulated by actresses and their press agents. The little Arab is convinced that Valentino died of a broken heart, not appendicitis. “I think I knew Valentino as well as any one,” Abdul told me here today. I can tell thr real cause of his death: it was due to a broken heart. "Although adored by millions of women all over the world, who w r rote burning love letters to him, he loved only one girl, a Hollywood super, but she did not care for him. “He lavished costly presents upon her, but she never loved him. When he saw that he could not get her heart, he died of grief. “It was never the same after Valentino died. I might have remained in Hollywood, but I became so sad that I had to come back to the desert of my fathers.” BUM ABDUL, who was a boy of 11 when Rex Ingram took him to America, is now a full-grown man of 18. He is pointed toward a great fortune, for word has spread among the tourists that Valentino’s companion is a guide in the desert, and British and American women hunt him out to tell them stories of the world’s once greatest lover as they sit under an Algerian moon before a desert campfire. Romance pays well and Abdul long ago could have bought himself a dozen wives. PARK CUSTODIAN IS SUSPENDED BY BOARD Patrick Bain Charged With Taking Absence Without Leave. Charges of absence without leave were filed against Patrick Bain, Brookside Community House custodian, today by Recreation Director David S. Kilgore. The park board set a hearing on the allegations for next Thursday, ordering suspension of Bain. Camilla < Count) Rosasco, who was tried two weeks ago as result of a shortage of 2,500 golf tickets, was discharged as Riverside golf course manager, because of his failure to send in a written resignation as suggested by his attorney. RAILROAD VETERAN ILL Former Union Pacific President Is in Critical Condition. Bu United Press CHICAGO, June 6.—A. L. Mohler, 80, former president of the Union Pacific railioad, was reported to be critically ill in St. Anthony’s hospital today following a paralytic stroke induced by a heart, attack.
BANK BUILDING SOLD J. F. Wild Structure Bought by George C. Forrey. Sale of J. F. Wild & Cos. state bank building. 123 East Market street, to George C. Forray of the Fletcher American National bank and Fletchei American Company for more than $375,000 has been completed. The agreement came after a hearing recently in circuit court before Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, where the receivership is pending. The court order for the sale has been issued. The property went into the hands of the court after the failure of the J. F. Wild & Cos. State bank. Edgar M. Blessing, receiver, is understood to have agreed to accepting $57,000 in cash for the structure. Preferred stock, completing the purchase price, will be issued and holders of the stock in the original company are said to have agreed to buy the new issue. BOA ST IN GIsiRLHEUD FOR MURDER PART Detective Impersonating Capone's Brother Wins Confession. Bu United Press NEW YORK. June A detective with a scar undft- one eye proved such a good impersonator of James Capone, brother of Scarface Al, that he fooled Rose HalP’rin, 28. into admitting her part in the killing of Jacob Rothenberg, a clothing manufacturer, murdered during a clothing strike here Feb. 10. Detective Eugene S. Caneveri of Inspector Lyons’ staff has arrived here from Montreal with the woman. Police say she boasted to a group of Chicago gunmen in Montreal that she was hired at S4O a week to put Rothenberg on the spot at the order of Irving Ashkenas, who -socked and killed him. "
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The Indianapolis Times Partly cloudy, somewhat cooler tonight; Saturday generally fair.
VOLUME 42—NUMBER 22
BOY, 6, KILLED BY BLADES OF ROAD GRADER Child Climbs on Drag and Falls Under Knives as Bump Rock Truck LAD DIES INSTANTLY Operator of Tractor Did Not Know of Presence on Machine. Falling beneath blades of a road grader near his home this afternoon, Merlin Crockett, 6, son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Crockett, R. R. 2, Acton, was killed instantly. The boy, with two brothers and a sister was playing in the roadway near his home when the road grader, drawn by a tractor driven by Raymond Myers, 34, of Arlington avenue, near Acton, passed. Climbing on to the drag the boy rode it for a short distance and fell off when it struck a bump in the road. The blades of the grader struck the back of his neck. Myers and his son Frank. 11, on the tractor did not know the boy had jumped on to the grader, they told Deputy Sheriffs Fred Fox and James Haynes. Dr. A. A. Swails, called, said the boy died instantly. The lad was one of five children and was playing with his brothers and sister, Kenneth 5, Leona 3. Norman 2 and Louis 1. respectively. DRAWS PRISON TERM Alleged Yegg Sentenced on Burglary Charge. A chance conversation, overheard in a poolroom, on the secret of extracting nitroglycerine from dynamite, and a subsequent failure to blow a safe with the “Soup,” drew for Jack Hanlan, 32, of 106 West Eleventh street, a two-to-fourteen-year prison sentence when tried Thursday afternoon by Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Hanlan was held jointly with Oscar Hughes, 32, of 38 South Grace street, on a charge of conspiracy' to commit burglary. Hughes received the same penalty as Hanlan, but Collins suspended it. Statements of the two defendr- 's set out that they “failed” in their first job because of a barking dog. In their flight, they were captured by police.
MERCURY WILL DROP Cooler Weather to Remain Until Saturday. With temperatures lowered several degrees this morning following thunderstorms Thursday night, still cooler weather was forecast today by the United States weather bureau here. Saturday will be generally fair, and temperatures probably will rise again, attaches at the bureau'declared. Today and tonight will be partly loudy. Thursday’s high temperature was 87 degrees at 4 p. m.
JUDGE ORDERSPEANUT CAR WHISTLE STILLED Shriek Annoys Wall Street Dentist; Law Demands Silence. Bu United Press NEW YORK, June 6.—Either Letoudia silences the steam whistle on his peanut pushcart in Wall Street, or the majesty of the law will “deal severely with him.” That was the ultimatum delivered today by Magistrate Stern when Letoudia was brought before him on complaint of Dr. John H. Hanning, a dentist in Wall Street, who objected to the whistle. The dentist said the whistle on the cart, which usually was parked in front of his office, emitted “a horrible and most unusual noise.” He had complained to the police, he said, but although Letoudia stopped the blast when a policeman appeared. he started it again when the policeman went away. Former Resident Dead Ba Times Special BROWNSVILLE, Ind., June 6. Mrs. Harvey Doyle, a former resident here, died at Indianapolis. The body will be brought here for burial. She leaves her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Mary Miller; a son, John Allen, and her father, James Jones.
SILK HAT, RAGGED HOBO SIDE BY SIDE WHEN A PUP S IN DISTRESS
Bn VHitrd Press CHICAGO. June 6.—When I something happens to a pup, well, something's got to be done about it. That's why a rich man in a limousine shook hands with a hobo, why a street gamin spoke to a policeman for the first time' in his life and why a little brown pup still is alive. It all happened on a busy downtown street, where such things are not supposed to happen and where every one is supposed to be too busy to pay any attention to any one else's affairs,
‘One-Man Crime Wave’ Dies in Electric Chair Bu United Press t HUNTSVILLE. Tex., June 6. William (Dagger) Pruitt, youthful bandit who terrorized Dallas for three weSks by his “one-man crime wave” and climaxed his career by killing a high school student, paid with his life in the electric chair at Texas state penitentiary early today. Shortly before he was led to the death chamber, Pruitt stoutly maintained his innocence, although he was captured in a gun battle in which he wounded two police officers. “Don’t say I confessed to killing William Mann,” he pleaded. “Say I never did it.” Pruitt met death calmly.
CONVICT PASTOR OF ABDUCTION Jurors Decide Evangelist Kidnaped Girl. Bu United Press ALTON, 111., June 6.—The Rev. A. L. Shoemaker, evangelist, was found guilty by a jury in city court today on a charge of abducting Miss Bernice Ford, 19-year-old member of his choir. The minimum sentence is one year. The evangelist, who has been conducting revival meetings at Nutwood, 111., at night during the trial, was charged with having induced the pretty choir singer to make a trip to Missouri with him. Shoemaker heard the verdict without emotion and said he would appeal Meanwhile, he announced, he would continue his evangelistic meetings. Miss Ford charged that Shoemaker promised he would divorce his wife and marry her after the trip. * The evangelist still faces two other charges of abduction. He is accused o? taking two girl saxophone players from his church orchestra on a trip to Florida last year. ZEPPELIN ENDS HOP Lands in Germany After Long Flight. Bu United Pros FRIEDRICHSHAFEN. Germany, June 6.—The Graf Zeppelin, completing its spectacular flight to North and South America and return, landed at its home port here late today. A large crowd cheered the Zeppelin- and its commander, Hugo Eckener, on returning from the most ambitious journey since its flight around the world.
RACE CAR ATTACHED BY CITY BODY BUILDER 5640 Owing in Labor Bills on Gleason’s 'Car, Suit Alleges, ~'e.)uty sheriffs today wheeled the car driven in the 500-mile topeedway classic by Jimmy Gleason into the Market garage to await action on attachment proceedings brought by Herman Frank, local body builder, in superior court five. Frank alleges that Ray W. Painter, said to be the owner of the car and riding mechanic for Gleason, owes $640 in labor bills for reconstructing the car to the two-man specification. The car, MUler-motored, bore No. 7 in the race and went out shortly aft or the 100-mile mark.
SICKING TO MILLERS Veteran Indian Infielder Released on Option. Eddie Sicking, veteran infielder with the Indians, today was released to the Minneapolis club on an optional transaction that probably will see the popular Cincinnati pastimer in action with the Millers the entire season. Sicking came back to the Tribe from Louisville in a trade for Herman Layne, but was handicapped by a weak arm and Bud Connolly was returned to second. Sicking was Tribe captain several years ago before being sold to Louisville in 1927. Sixty-One Girls Graduated Bu Times Special ST. MARY’S Ind., June 6.—Names of thirty-eight young women were added to the roster of graduates of St. Mary-of-the-Woods college Thursday, when they received diplomas at the school’s eighty- ninth annual commencement. At the same time twenty-three girls were graduated from the academy of the school.
not even those of a little brown pup. A pet store window on Madison street Thursday morning was crowded with pups, black ones, white ones, gray ones and dappled ones. In one corner stood a little brown pup, lonesome and ignored. The others started a playful tumble and the first thing the little brown pup knew he was in the midst of it. His ear was nipped- So was his leg. The ... .. .S • ~...
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1930
BROTHER SURE MOBILE MAN DIEDJN FIRE Ernest Schroeder Returns to City to Push Probe of Auto Murder. BODY STILL UNCLAIMED Authorities Admit Clews in Roadside Mystery Lead Nowhere. Contending the charred body of a man found in a blazing car on the High School road last Saturday morning is that of his brother— Herbert Schroeder, 35-year-old Mobile, Ala., business man—Ernest Schroeder of Evanston, 111., will return here today to push investigation of the mystery. Despite unanimous opinion of Coroner C. H. Keever„ Sheriff George Winkler and Detective Chief Fred Simon that the body is not that of Schroeder and that the Mobile man is a fugitive, the brother declares himself convinced Harold has been the victim of foul play and his body burned. Body Is Unclaimed To date, however, he has failed to claim the body for burial. Wife of the missing man, at Mobile, declared sha would not claim the remains or make attempts to collect the more than $30,000 insurance Schroeder carried on his life made payable to her, until convinced the body is that, of her husband. Sheriff George Winkler has applied to United States army officials for a complete chart of Schroeder’s measurements, taken when he entered service. The data will aid in search for him, Sheriff Winkler declares. . Authorities here today admitted the investigation has led only to blank walls. Identity of the torch murder victim has not been established. Check-up of lists of missing men here have proven futile and authorities believe the charred body that of a Speedway race visitor who may not be reported missing for several months. Probe In Pensacola The investigation has turned to the south for solution of many problems. Today inquiries were being conducted at Pensacola, Fla., former home, of the Mobile business man, to determine, if possible, identity of the two men and a woman from that city who met and argued with Schroeder at Mobile the day before he left there in his automobile for the north. One of the two men tellies with descriptions of a man with whom Schroeder was seen In Indianapolis.
LEVY HIKEJS URGED State Boost Proposed as School Aid Remedy. Increase in the state tax levy with corresponding decreases in the local levies was proposed as the solution for the financial distress in the Indiana school system at the County Superintendents Association meeting in the Lincoln today. Investigations reported upon by George C. Cole, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn county superintendent, indicated such an increase would equalize the tax situation. Cole, who was a member of the Governor’s commission to investigate school finance in the state, said: “It would increase taxes in all wealthy' units and reduce the rates in all poor school units of the state.” INCREASE SHOWN IN MEXICAN POPULATION ■k.,,. ~, Boost of 2,069,250 Is Recorded in Last Nine Years, MEXICO CITY, June 6. The population of Mexico has increased 2,069,250 to 16,404,030 in the last nine years, according to figures made public today of the census taken Mas 15. DOG TAX DEADLINE"SET Charges to Be Preferred After Sept. 10 for Nonpayment. Charges will be preferred against persons failing to pay this year’s dog tax after Sept. 10 Frank J. Brattain, Center township assessor, announced today. Starting Monday, persons seeking to pay taxes before the September date must appear at the offices of Prosecutor Judson L. Stark, in whose hands delinquent bills have been placed. Arrangements may'be made with Stark to pay the fees to Mrs. Amelia Harding, township trustee, Brattain said.
OUTSIDE crowded about a dozen citizens, hobos, grimy boys from nearby printing offices. They tried to open the door. It was locked. The pet store owner had not yet reported. They pounded on the windows. But still the attack on the little brown pup went on. The white pups swarmed all over the little brown one, snapping, growling, barking, momentarily as wiki as their primitive ancestors. The crowd outside grew to fifty, to 10CL. One man lighted paper
New Head of City Schools Has Notable Record on Past Posts
SENATE’S TARIFF LINEUP IS CLOSE
Prospects for Killing of Measure Is Still in Doubt. BY RAY TUCKER Times Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 6.—A1l hope of defeating the Hawley-Smoot bill today depended on Its enemies’ strength in- the senate or a presidential veto. The bill again is in conference following Vice-President Curtis’ action in upholding points of order against certain rates, but it will probably be returned to the senate in a day dr so. That section of the bill containing the rates, which led to its going back to conference, probably will be agreed to without much difficulty, and the real battle will begin again when the part of the report containing the flexible provision, the debenture and duties on lumber and sugar are taken up. House to Take Anything Prospects for killing the measure in the senate or at the White House still remain in doubt. The only sure thing is that almost any form of measure will be accepted by the house. The lineup is so close in the senate that few predictions are being made. Two weeks ago the vote was so close that Curtis broke a 42-42 tie with his vote against the kind of flexible clause wanted by the Democrats and Progressives. The delay in coming to a final vote, however, favors the bill’s foes, as the growing volume of protest may gain them a few votes among the waverers. What President Hoover will do if the measure finally reaches him also is questionable. Unpopularity Studied Despite G. .O. P. leaders’ assurance he will sign it, inspired statements in White House circles again insist he has kept an open mind. The same sort of statements were made a few weeks ago, but they were followed by Hoover’s active intervention to get the kind of a flexible provision he wants. Any change of heart at the White House, it is believed, would be due to additional evidence that it is unpopular with the country and would hurt business. HINDU RIOTERS DOOMED Four Sentenced to Die in India for Murder of Constables. Bu United Press BOMBAY, India, June 6.—Four persons were sentenced to death today in Sholapur for the murder of several constables killed during the recent rioting there. Sentence was pronounced in sessions couit by Judge Njivadia, a native jurist. SEEPAGE BRINGS ARREST Liquor Comes Through Ceiling, Cops Hold One on Dry Charge. When liquid, alleged to have been home brew, seeped through the ceiling of a beauty shop at 3006 Central avenue Thursday afternoon, police raided rooms above and arrested George Palmer, 29, of Sheridan, on charges of operating a blind tiger.
in a vain attempt to attract the attention of the battling pups. Another man stopped his limousine, approached with his cane and put it against the -glass. The loafers, the hobos, the printers and clerks were ready to help him push it through. a a a A N urchin ran up with a po- ***- 1 iceman, who advised against breaking the window. He then hurried for the owner. The crowd had grown to 200. All shouted, pounded on the window, tried the
Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Stetson and their daughter Louise
Twin Wives Fate decrees that Eleanor Sanver, petted darling of society, and Cynthia Brown, dancing girl of the chorus, shall meet, two girls who are twins in every detail except that of birth. . They meet at the Keyhole, fashionable night club, after the theatrical performance, and this whim of chance changes the entire trend of their lives, leading them into amazing adventures. Read the third installment cf “Twin Wives,” Arthur Somers Roche’s enthralling serial, on Page 18 of this edition. If you missed the first two installments in Wednesday and Thursday’s Times, call Riley 5651 for back numbers and start reading this fascinating romance.
BANDITS ROB STORE Armed Trio Gets $100; Ties Up Manager, Clerk. Three gunmen held up an Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company grocery at 1642 Spruce street early today, rifled the cash register of SIOO, bound a clerk q,nd the manager together and escaped in an automobile they had parked near the store. One of the trio approached Frank French, 17, of 1615 Pleasant Run boulevard, clerk, and asked for a nickel’s worth of cakes. As the youth served him the man drew a pistol and forced the boy to lie down on the floor. Another of the three put T. D. Maynard. 51, of 1437 Olive street, manager, filongside French, on the floor, while the third man took the money and searched the store for other funds. The bandits bound Maynard and French together in a rear room and fled. Maynard and the boy walked to the front of the store where a customer cut their bonds.
LUDLOW QUIZ ENDED \ Defeat for Updike Is Seen in Election Contest. l\u Times Snecint WASHINGTON, June 6—A prompt decision seating Representative Louis L. Ludlow as representative of the Indianapolis district and dismissing the election contest of former Representative Ralph E. Updike, was forecast today at the conclusion of' testimony before election committee No. 1 of the house. After a two-hour session the committee determined to meet in executive session Saturday to dispose of the case. From the tenor of the committee interrogations, and the general direction of the inquirjfr there were strong indications that a mjority will vote quickly to dismiss the Updike contest as unsupported by evidence.
door. The little brown pup was getting the worst of it. Finally the pet store owner arrived and took the bleeding little pup from the window. The crowd broke up, felt a little foolish, as grown men will on such occasions. But the man with the cane shook hands with the man whose toes showed through his shoes. They shock hands because when something .happens to a pup. something’s got to be dope about it,
Entered as Second-Class Matter at I’ostofffce, Indianapolis
Comes to Indianapolis Aug. 1 Fresh From Triumphs at Dayton. Ba ( nitrd Press DAYTON, 0., June 6.—A homey person who better understands his school children, and leans more toward them because of a wife and daughter at home on whom his thoughts constantly are lavished. That’s what acquaintances here say Indianapolis gains through Dayton’s loss of Paul C. Stetson, who Aug. 1 becomes superintendent of Indianapolis schools. To Indianapolis, Stetson’s accession to the highest educational post in the city is the return to the fold of a native Hoosier, from whose successes in foreign pastures his home folk expect to reap a rich measure, of educational blessings. Tli at their expectations are not unfounded Stetson's record in Dayton, and elsewhere, indicates. Point of Warfare Nine years ago he walked into an office where many an angel was afraid to tread, that of superintendent of Dayton schools, then the pivotal point of a civic revolution. A battle over location of anew high school building had ripped the school board asunder, resulting in ousting of the incumbent superintendent, and any candidate to succeed him, favored by one group, immediately incurred disfavor of the rival faction. Under pressure the board finally appointed Stetson, then superintendent of Muskegon <Mich.) schools. Out of the chaos Stetson at once molded unity of the antagonists. Raised Fund Quota In the trying days of the 1929 Community Chest campaign when a chairman was needed vitally, Stetson was named for the post, and the quota was raised despite predictions to the opposite. Stetson was born in Logansport, Ind., and received Bachelor of Arts degree from Kalamazoo (Mich.) college and University of Chicago. Successively he was principal of Bangor (Mich.) high school, principal of Big Rapids (Mich.) high school, superintendent of Big Rapids schools, principal of a Grand Rapids high school and superintendent at Muskegon. He has lectured during summers at Western State Teachers’ college, Kalamazoo, University of Chicago and University of Michigan.
EDITORS HOLD SESSION Scripps-Howard Chief to Address Oklahoma Silver Jubilee. Bn United Press WOODWARD, Okla., June 6. Oklahoma editors met here today to celebrate the silver jubilee convention of the Oklahoma Press Association. George B. Parker of New York, editor-in-chief of Scripps-Howard newspapers, - will be the principal speaker at tonight’s banquet. YOUTH TO GET FORTUNE $3,500,000 Goes to Alexis Thompson, 16, When He Becomes 21. Bn United Press CHICAGO, June 6. Alexis Thompson, a 16-year-old youth now attending St. Paul's academy in Concord. Mass., will receive a fortune estimated at $3,500,000 when he becomes 21; an inventory of the estate of his father, David P. Thompson, steel magnate, who died recently, revealed today. TWO ACCUSED OF FRAUD Grocer Charges Pair Pretended to Be Postal Employes. Charged with vagrancy, William Earle, 45, of 942 Bell avenue, and Sylvian Kinaman, 949 Bell avenue, were arrested late Thursday after they are alleged to have obtained groceries under false pretenses. L. V. Thorp, grocer at 507 Hamilton avenue, told police they represented to him they were postal employes in order to get credit for groceries. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 66 10 a. m 63 7a, m 66 11 a. m 67 8a- m 67 12 (noon).. 64 , 9a. m,.... 67 Ip. m 62
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CHILD’S SHORN CURLS VIEWED MURDER CAUSE Girl and Middle-Aged Man Found Shot to Death in Car Wreckage. MISSING FOR FIVE DAYS Suicide Is Believed to Have Followed Slaying Over Loved Tresses. BY JOSEPH F. HEARST United Press Staff Correspondent ROCHESTER. Mich., June 6. The mystery which hid the fate of a 13-year-old girl and a lonely middle-aged man who had been her inseparable companion since infancy was solved today, but the reason for the tragic destiny which overtook them remained to puzzle police investigators. In a wooded thicket on a farm seven miles from here a searching party came upon the bodies of young Marjorie Clemons and Henry. Clouse, 46, lying side by side near' the charred wreckage of an automobile in which they drove away last week and disappeared from sight. Tucked in Blanket Between the body of the girl, tucked carefully in a blanket, and that cf the man who for eleven years had been living with her family and helping rear her, lay a rifle. Investigators decided that Clouse had shot the child and then killed himself. For five days, hundreds of county, city and state policemen; aided by Boy Scouts and private citizens, had searched the countryside around Rochester for a trace of the pair. They had left the home of Marjorie’s parents last Thursday, Clouse explaining he was taking the girl out for a driving lesson. “You’ll be back early?” asked Mrs. Clemons as they bade her good-by. “Not Too Early” “Don’t expect us too early,” the child replied. When they failed to return that night the mother was anxious, but did not immediately fear for Marjorie’s safety, she said, because of her implicit trust in Clouse. The man always had looked upon the child almost as his own, she explained, and seemed devoted to her. He bought her presents frequently and on one occasion had asked the girl’s mother to allow him to name her beneficiary of his insurance. Mrs. Clemons recalled also that Clouse was known as a woman hater. He was a quiet, orderly man, she said, but would not attend church for fear a woman parishioner might sit beside him. All through the years which he spent in the Clemons home he never, until recently had found occasion for scolding Marjorie, who was talented in music, wrote poetry and read much. Scolded About Hair A short tihie ago, however, she cut her hair, removing the long curls which Clouse always had admired and he chided her. She resented it, and police now believe the quarrel might have affected the companionship between the pair to such an extent that Clouse, brooding over it suffered mental impairment. Clouse went to Marjorie’s father several days before he disappeared with the girl and borrowed his gun. Tbo incident was not recalled until searchers late Thursday discovered the missing pair, dead from bullet wounds beside the burned framework of Clouse’s car. CONTINUE VOTE QUIZ Primary Probe Is Likely to End Next Week. The grand jury probe into alleged primary election fraud probably will not end before the latter part of next week, it was indicated today. It was pointed out that the jury has but three weeks of its six months ’term left in which to make a finding. At least ten days of that time will be consumed by an investigation jnto the condition of county institutions, it was said. Earl R. Cox, deputy prosecutor, and William R. Ringer, representing Prosecutor Judson L. Stark, today declined to comment on the jury's progress. They indicated, however, results may be expected when the jurors make a final report to Criminal Judge James A. Collins. IGNORES ‘FAME’ PLEA Widow of Oscar Hammerstein Found Guilty of Vagrancy, Bu United Press NEW YORK, June 6.—Mrs. Oscar Hammerstein, widow of the lateJ theatrical producer, was founjj guilty of vagrancy in Jefferson Maa| ket court today despite her conuAH tion that she was “framed” byjHn licerren. She was remanded to await sentence. Mrs. Hammerstein was May 12 by Patrolman Hugh, who testified she uNvfcV’ w&SrS 30 her room * imR
Outofde Marion County 3 Cent*
