Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1930 — Page 1

10,000 SHOUT WELCOME TO OCEANFUERS Police Lines Are Unable to Stem Surging Mob at Landing. RECEIVED AT CITY HALL Mayor Walker Presents Southern Cross Crew With Medals. Bu United Press NEW YORK, June 27.—Captain Charles E. Kingsford-Smith and his three shipmates of the airplane Southern Cross came down to the city hall here today to receive the official honors New York reserves for its distinguished guests. On their own request, the ceremony perhaps was the simplest the city has given any of the celebrities which have received its homage—yet there were some 5,000 people crowded in the open spaces of City Hall park to cheer the four Atlantic fliers as they came to meet Mayor James J. Walker. Instead of the spectacular ceremonies of landing at the Battery and parading up Broadway, Kings-ford-Smith, Everett Van Dyke, J. W. Stannage and Capt. J. Patrick Saul chose to ride simply down Fifth avenue from their hotel, escorted only by a group of motorcycle police. Shoppers Pause to Cheer Shoppers on Fifth avenue paused a moment to applaud and a few to cheer —but many hardly knew what was happening. Mayor Walker presented medals of the city of New York to each of the four. Carrying four weary men, the monoplane shot out of the sunset at Roosevelt field Thursday and coasted to the conclusion o. a flight that started at Port Marnock, Ireland, paused at Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, and ended here. Captain Charles Kingsford-Smith swung a leg out of the cockpit, stretched his cramped muscles and grinned. "Gee,” he said, ‘Tm glad to be here." 10,000 at Field Ten thousand persons had watted for hours at Roosevelt field to greet the fliers. They climbed over a wire fence that had been erected to keep them off the field; they swept through police lines and descended on the plane. Sir Ronald Lindsay, British ambassador to the United States, was caught in the swirl and carried along. Grover Whalen, head of the mayor’s reception committee, yelled for police to push back the crowd, but 125 patrolmen were helpless as the 10,000 fought their way up to the wings of the Southern Cross. It was the most turbulent repception ever seen at Roosevelt field. Hoover in Greeting s ’'WASHINGTON, June 27.—Captain Charles E. Kingsford-Smith and the crew of the Southern Cross, will be received by President Hoover Monday, it was announced at the White House today. The Southern Cross will fly here from Roosevelt field. SERVICES SET MONDAY FOR RESTAURATEUR James F. Duchieman Business Man In City 25 Years. Funeral services will be held at 2 Monday at Flanner & Buchanan undertaking parlors for James F. Ducheiman, 63. Indianapolis restaurant operator for more than twenty-five years, who died early today at his home, 351 Massachusetts avenue, as result of a stroke of paralysis. Bom in Lebanon, Duchieman came to Indianapolis thirty years ago, opening a restaurant at 359 Massachusetts avenue, where he was in business since. Surviving him is the widow, Mrs. Rose D. Duchieman. Burial will be in Crown hill cemetery. CHURCH ORGANIST IS SUED FOR GOLD BOND Charged With Unlawfully Holding $1,200 Left in Estate. Replevin suit charging Miss Cora Brockway, 1653 North Talbott street, organist at the AH Souls Unitarian church, with unlawfully holding a $1,200 gold bond left in the estate of Mrs. Ruth A. Law, was filed today In superior court one by Will F. Law, husband of the deceased woman. Mrs. Brockway previously was named defendant m a probate court suit in which Law charged her with intervention in settlement of the estate. In the latter suit. Law asked for the recovery of certain property and a $550 judgment KILLED IN ARSON TRY Wellsburg (Ind.) Man Drew Gun, Arresting Officers Say. Su Mf££>LETr&WN, 0.. June 27.—A youth identified as Sol H. Barnett, 24, Wells burg. Ind., was shot and by police here early today “when they discovered him in an alleged plot to fire the home of A. P. Peterson. Police said the house, which was insured, was owned by an uncle of the slain youth. They said they shot Barnett when he drew a revolver.

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The Indianapolis Times Fair tonight, followed by increasing cloudiness Saturday; slightly warmer.

VOLUME 42—NUMBER 41

Tommy Just Sits and the Money Rains in

Bu United Press M , NEWARK, N. j., June 27.—Little Tommy Fraley, 2 years old, merely wanted to gain relief from the heat. He had no intention of making money. But the nickels and pennies simply rained on him. Tommy wandered away from his home this noon and reaching the corner of Wiight and Brunswick streets, he decided that the best way to cool off would be to disrobe. Accordingly, he removed his sun suit and sat himself down on the curb. A man in an automobile took one look at Tommy, grinned and hurled a nickel. A pedestrian tossed two pennies. Came another nickel, more pennies, more nickels. When traffic officer Clark spied Tommy, the child had both hands full of coins and the pavement around his feet glittered. Officer Clark took the boy to police headquarters where his parents already had reported him missing.

CITY CHOSEN FOR SOLDIERS’ HOSPITAL

$150,000 U. S. Structure to Be Erected at I. U. Center. Indianapolis was selected today as the site for the new $150,000 United States Veterans’ hospital, which will be erected at the Indiana university medical chapter on West Michigan street, following approval of the project by President Hoover. Site for the 150-bed hospital was recommended in a report from the United States hospitalization board, of which Brigadier-General Frank T. Hines is chairman, it as announced in Washington. First step toward construction of the institution will be taken within thirty days, officials said, with the advertising for bids. It is expected the buildings will be ready for occupancy either in the fall of 1931 or the spring of 1932. Two Sites Considered Two sites were considered by the board, one of which was on West Michigan street, west of the Indiana university nurses’ home, and the other along Fall creek, west of the city hospital power plant. It was understood generally that the board would recommend a site on White river along Burdsal boulevard or north of the Municipal Gardens, on the west side of White river. Engineers will come here from Washington to plan the building and an engineer of the hospitalization board will be in Indianapolis throughout construction of the building. Kokomo Reports Denied Dr. George Bowman, Indiana chairman of the veterans’ hospital committee, said he had not received word of the approval of the site by the President. Reports that another hospital will be erected in Kokomo were denied in Washington, officials declaring another bill carrying additional funds would have to be enacted before another institution would be planned. The Indianapolis unit will contain the regional office, the veterans’ bureau staff and facilities for emergency treatment, operation and examination, it was understood.

31 DIE WHEN LIGHTNING WRECKS DYNAMITE SHIP Bolt Sets Off Four Tons of Explosives Used in Channel Blasting; Recover 21 Bodies.

Bu United Press BROCKVILLE, Ontario. June 27. —Divers brought here from Kingston, Ontario, today began bringing bodies to the surface from the wreckage of the drill ship John B. King, which was struck by lightning and destroyed by dynamite explosions Thursday. Twenty bodies were brought up almost immediately after the divers began operations. One had been recovered previously. It was believed ten more were still to be recovered. The barge was wrecked wheff lightning struck it, passing down the drills into dynamite charges which had been set in the river bottom. The ship carried a four-ton cargo of explosives. Eleven were rescued by the crew of the United States revenue cutter C. G. 211, which was one-half mile west of the drill beat headed east for Ogdensburg, N. Y., when the explosion occurred. Officers of the government boat

SCHROEDER’S FEAR ALIBI GETS SOME SUPPORT BY SCIENCE

“OOUNDS mighty unreasonable,” was the comment of officers and many other persons when Harold Herbert Schroeder told a story of burning his car and the body of a hitch-hiker, killed in an accident, because he feared he would be accused of murder. “Impossible,” was the verdict of agents of the law, and they have subjected the torch man to many hours of grilling to break down his story. “Possible, even though it may be improbable,” is the view of science cm the fright story. For fact or fancy, the original confession of Schroeder has sound phychological justification from no less an authority than Dr. Alfred Adler, who with Dre. Freyd and*Jung, has formed the orig-

‘Not Same Girl’ Sight Restored, Chicagoan Sees Wife After 30 Years.

CHICAGO, June 27.—A man who battled his way to fortune despite his blindness, looked today upon a world which he had not seen for thirty years and pronounced it good—but different. “Only the flowers and trees are the same,” said J. F. Fish, wealthy Chicagoan, whose sight miraculously was restored in the left eye as he sat in the twilight listening to his wife read. “Never would I have dared to walk through the city as I have all these years,” said Fish, “if I had known those buildings were towering above me and the automobiles were rushing everywhere. Everything now sems so unreal, but it is good, very good, and very beautiful.” While he was on his honeymoon in Ohio late in 1899 a tree fell upon Fish, paralyzing his optic nerves. He spent more than $50,000 in efforts to regain his sight. But, undaunted by this failure or his handicap, he founded the Northwestern Business college and for twenty-eight years had been successful as a teacher and business man. Fish was unable to explain the retoration of his sight unless it was that time healed the injury he received thirty years ago. He Has been taking treatments from Dr. F. N. Bonine of Niles, Mich., for the last nine years. Fish’s physician said he believed the sight in the right eye would be restored, too, in time. All through the years, he said, his greatest desire was to see his wife again “I recognize my wife now, but she is not the same as the girl whose picture I have had in my mind these thirty years,” Fish, who is 48, said today.

said they saw the flash, heard a deafening report under which their craft shivered from stem to stern, and saw a cloud of smoke rising from the spot where the John B. King had been. The drill boat, which was 150 feet long with a fifty-foot beam, was completely out of sight when smoke from the explosion cleared away. Only blackened wreckage with a few dazed men clinging to it ever appeared on the surface. Officers of the coast guard cutter and two women who witnessed the accident from the porch of a summer cottage, Mrs. G. A. Clarke of Brooklyn, and Mrs. W. C. Walkerate of Brockville, said wreckage was thrown more than 100 feet in the air. The big boat vanished as if by a magician’s trick under the smoke, they said. The drill boat had been working night and day for several weeks bl&jting out rocks to improve the channel for navigation.

inal trinity of pioneers in “The News Psychology.” Schroeder’s confession set out that his car careened into a ditch, breaking the neck of a hitch-hik-er whom he had picked up along the highway. In fear, he said, he burned car and body because he felt he might be accused of murdering the man. “Anxious individuals flee into the protection of another situation, and attempt to fortify themselves in this way until they feel themselves capable of meeting and triumphing over the danger to which they feel themselves exposed.” This quotation from Dr. Adler's latest book, “Understanding Human Nauffe,” exactly fits the

INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1930

SUICIDE HALTS MERGER TRIAL IN STEEL WAR Youngstown Sheet and Tube’s Counsel Shoots Self as Court Opens. ACT LAID TO OVERWORK Billion-Dollar Project at Standstill Because of Tragic Death. Bu United Press YOUNGSTOWN, 0., June 27. Death took a hand in the “steel war” today and the fate of a billion dollar industry was forgotten in compassion for one man’s personal tragedy. Leroy A. Manchester, 47, chief counsel for Youngstown Sheet and Tube Corporation, shot ‘ and killed himself in his office this morning. Overwork in the long fight over the billion dollar merger of Sheet and Tube with Bethlehem Steel Corporation, and worry over the recent illness of his two little daughters, was blamed for his act. Manchester’s death came while judge and attorneys awaited his arrival at common pleas court where Cyrus S. Eaton and his allies are fighting for an injunction to halt the steel merger. Judge David T. Jenkins, president, just had mounted the bench, when he noticed that Manchester’s seat was empty. He asked that the attorney be called. Campbell Cries on Table Eugene G. Grace, president of Bethlehem Steel, returned from the telephone to announce that Manchester was dead. Judge Jenkins immediately adjourned court. All the participants in the court fight visibly were affected, especially James A. Campbell, white-haired veteran chairman of Sheet and Tube. Campbell, for many years closely associated with Manchester, put his head down on the defendant’s table and cried. Workers in the Sheet and Tube office, hearing the two shots that ended Manchestet’s life, entered his office to find him lying near a window, as if he had killed himself while gazing out. The shade was up, and the courthouse building, almost across the street, could be seen plainly. Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, and chief counsel defending the merger, exclaimed when he heard the news: “Worked to death! Just worked himself to death.’’ Leaves Wife, Children The attorney is survived by his wife and three daughters, Rosanna, 16; Josephine, 9, and Mary Ann, 3. Mrs. Manchester shut herself and the children in her room when the news -was brought to her, and refused to see any one. Friends of the attorney said his nerves were shattered during the proxy fight of the first week in April when he worked night and day, while Josephine and Rosanna, lay near death in a hospital. The little girls were stricken with scarlet fever just after the merger negotiations were begun. Both recovered. WORKS BOARD ASKS $898,000 IN BUDGET Appropriation Is Requested; $21,000 Increase Over 1929. The board of works’ department of administration budget asking appropriation of $898,000 was submitted for board approval today by Joseph McNamara, board clerk. The appropriation request is a $21,000 increase over last year and includes a $13,000 addition for heat, light, water and power. There was a light deficit of $37,000 for last year. Emmett L. McGinley, Ninth ward committeeman, was appointed a clerk in the assmnent bureau on recommendation w Chief Clerk Martin H. Walpo.;. NEGRO SAVED FROM MOB Police Save Confessed Attacker of Women from Enraged Throng. Bu United Press PORT ARTHUR, Tex., June 27. Police saved Rainey Wililams, 3j*-year-old Negro from an angry m \ that gathered around city jail today. Williams had confessed to attacking eight white women in the last thirty days. By a ruse the Negro was placed in Fire Chief L. C. Enright’s automobile and taken to Beaumont.

situation outlined in the confession. Dr. Adler is commenting in general on effects and emotions and this particular portion of the book deals with fear and anxiety. “Anxiety is one of the most significant phenomena in the life of man,” he says. “A child escapes one situation by his fear, but he runs to the protection of one else. mam "'T'HE mechanism of anxiety -*■ does not directly demonstrate any supriority—indeed, it seems to illustrate defeat. “In anxiety, one seeeks to make oneself as small as possible, but it is at this point tlf&t the conjunctive effect, which

TOM MOONEY AND WARREN BILLINGS ARE NEAR FREEDOM

High Court Likely to Urge Bomb Case Pardon to Governor. Bu United Press SAN FRANCISCO, June 27. Probability that Tom Mooney and Warrer. K. Billings will be freed from prison within a month was established today by the United Press from sources close to Governor C. C. Young. Mooney and Billings now are serving their thirteenth year after conviction on charges of engineering the preparedness day bombing in San Francisco in July of 1916. Six persons were killed in the explosion. Three died later. Forty were wounded. The state supreme court now is sitting as a board of review in the Billings case. From an authoritative source, the United Press learned definitely that Governor Young is making his plans for issuance of the orders which will free both Mooney and Billings almost immediately, in the event of a favorable recommendation by the court. Expected in Few Days From an authoritative source, the United Press learned definitely that Governor Young expects the court to recommend a pardon, and accordingly is completing plans for issuance of the orders which will free Billings and Mooney. The supreme court decision is expected within a few days, and it was indicated today in , official circles that ection by the Governor confirming the recommendation will follow immediately. Under a law enacted at the last session of the legislature, the Governor is not empowered to consider an application for pardon from a two-time felon until the supreme court has recommended it. Billings had served a term at Folsom for unlawful possession of dynamite before his conviction in the bombing. Only One Before Court The Billings case is the only one before the supreme court. Governor Young, however, has announced that he considers Mooney and Billings to be on the same footing, and whatever decision is made as a result of the Billings review also will be applied to Mooney. Should the supreme court decide against Billings, the Governor can not pardon him, and by his own statement will not pardon Mooney separately. The Governor is reported to believe that while the innocence of the two men never was established completely, at the same time the basic theory of presumption of innocence was lost sight of during the war-time hysteria of their trials. MEXICAN REBELS - ARM 300 Fanners Reported Marching on City of Chihuahua. Bn United Press EL. PASO, Tex., June 27.—While two governors occupied the state palace in Chihuahua City, state of Chihuahua, Mexico, today, reports to the El Paso Post said word spread through the city that 300 armer Agrarians were were on the way from Villa Chauhtemoc, sixty milometers aways, to reduce the number to one. ‘MYSTERY MAN’ WINS Bernard E. Smith Reported to Have Made Ten Million in Stocks. Bu United Press NEW YORK, June 27.—Bernard E. Smith, “mystery man” operator in Wall Street, was reported to have made approximately $10,000,000 in the past month by selling short in the recent bear market.

Mighty Blow Is Dealt to Demon Gum’in Zion City

ZION CITY, HI., June 27.—Word came to Wilbur Glenn Voliva, overseer of this religious colony who believes the world is flat, that three of his girl employes had been seen purchasing chewing gum. Gum chewing, along with cigaret smoking, is against the “blue laws” of Zion City, so the three girls, Lillian, Dorothy and Mary Baker, were ordered before the board of executives. Under questioning, they admitted readily they had purchased the gum from William Bickett, a store keeper, and then added, brazenly, it seemed to Voliva, that they also were chewing the gum. The overseer discharged them from the Zion institutions and industries plant and exiled them from the colony.

carries with it at the same time a thirst for superiority, becomes evident.” (Schroeder’s “superiority” was expressed in his bold return to Mobile in the belief that he could “outsmart” the police.) “The anxious individuals flee into the protection of another situation, and attempt to fortfy themselves in this way until they feel themselves capable of meeting and triumphing over the danger to which they feel exposed. In this affect we are dealing with a phenomenon which is very deeply rooted organically. It is a reflection of the primitive fear which seizes all living things. Mankind is especially subject to this fear because of his weakness and tasecuxlfeyuMNM

Entered as Second -Class Matter at Poatoffiee. Indianapolis. Ind.

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Tom Mooney as he appears today. (Inset) —In 1918 shortly after his arrest.

4 Make ’Em Stay’ Gas City Merchants Ask Boost in Traction Fare to Marion.

“TT’S too easy for people to leave X Gas City.” This was the complaint of fifteen of the town’s merchants today to the public service commission when they petitioned for a boost in the fare of the MarionGas City route of the Union Traction Company. The fare now is 5 cents each way for each passenger. The merchants asked it be boosted to 19 cents each way. The distance is 6 and 1-3 miles. The business men said they lose a large amount of business because persons go to Marion to shop, due to the low transportation rate. ROTH HEADS ROTARY Stanford University Man Is Elected. Bu United Press _ CHICAGO, June 27.—Almon E. Roth, business manager of Stanford university at Palo Alto, Cal., is the new president of Rotary International. Roth’s election was announced today at the close of Rotary’s twentyfifth anniversary convention. He defeated Raymond J. Knoeppel, New York corporation lawyer, and succeeds President M. E. Newsom, whose term expires. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 64 10 a. m 73 7a. m..... 67 11 a. in 75 Ba. m 69 12 (noon).. 78 9 a. m 72 1 p. m 79

(Schroeder’s life was complicated by a sweetheart as well as wife and children whom he was said to have supported inadequately. In the garage business, he is alleged to have been “inefficient,” depending on his manager.) nan “ r T'HE’ farther one stands from the solution of life’s problems, the more developed is his >|utiousness. Should such per- - ms ever be forced to make an advance, they carry the gestures and plans of their retreat with them. “They always are prepared for retreat, and naturally their most common and oiious character trait is tire affecPof anxiety.”

SCHRQEDER GIVES PROMISE ‘TO TALK’ AFTER SEEING RELATIVES ON WAY TO CITY Torch Man Is Expected to Be Taken to Scene of Tragedy on High School Road During* Day. HAGGARD AFTER VIEWING BODY] Important Admissions Made by Prisoner irt Grilling, Says Winkler; Sisters Due to Reach Here by Saturday

BY CHARLES E. CARLL Any man with the knowledge of a death on his mind and sou. who can stand in front of the charred remains of his alleged victim has—nerve. Any man who can know such circumstances and who can undergo a six-way grilling by authorities in the hot, damp recesses of a garage, looking down at that body and never break is—stubborn. These are the traits that were revealed in Harold Herbert Schroeder Thursday afternoon when he faced the ghastly remains of the man he is supposed to have murdered and burned to death in his car on the High School road May 31. Views Charred Body In a dim corner of the Royster & Askin funeral directors’ garage the charred remains of the man who died in Schroeder’s car lay in a plain, wooden casket. The top was shoved to one side. A light switch clicked, flooding the grewsome contents of the box with an intense light from a powerful lamp overhead. t Schroeder shuddered. Sweat broke out on his forehead. He rocked back and forth on his heels and then stiffened as if he were galvanized by an electric shock. He licked his lips and turned his head, first one way and then another. His eyes smarted from the formaldehyde. Tears trickled down his cheeks. Schroeder Is Nervous Silence, then, for several minutes. Schroeder’s eyes were glued on the corpse. Head down, he rubbed his hands together, clanking the handcuffs that held them. Six pairs of eyes scanned his face. Then came the verbal shot from all directions: “How did you kill him?” Head still down, Schroeder began to quiver. His legs and hands shook. A fresh flood of perspiration broke out on his face and neck. Again: “How did you kill him?” And silence was all that answered the question fired a third time by the authorities. A Negro car washer turned on a hose to wash a hearse. Schroeder jumped. Then he looked again at the corpse. “I Didn’t Kill Him” “I didn’t kill him,” came the feeble reply. “Who did?” was the next query. To this there was silence, longer than before. “I don’t know,” finally came from the murder suspect. Pleas of police, Sheriff Winkler and Coroner C. H. Keever for Schroeder to talk brought no response. “Listen, Harold, give that—give that thing a break,” Detective Clarence Golder pleaded, pointing to the casket’s awful cargo. “If you didn’t kill hint tell us who did, so we can get him.” Winkler interposed. “Didn’t you tell me you poured oil on that body before you burned it?” Smokes Fourth Cigaret Schroeder again was silent. The questioning then led to where he stayed while he was here for the Speedway race and how the man died in his car. Schroeder said he did not remember where he lived, but that he stayed in a private home. To the death query he answered: “I don’t know what did it. I’ve been trying to think. I was plumb out of my mind. Maybe flying glass killed him.” Keever told him examination showed the man either died by a j bullet or knife, and not with a bro-! ken neck, as Schroeder has said. Schroeder again looked away from the casket and bent down to wipe the sweat from the palms of his handcuffed hands. Both hands went to the back of his neck and he started smoking his fourth cigaret. Denies Going on “Parties” Here He denied he had been onl “parties” here and didn’t consider “taking a girl for a ride and buying her beer” a “party.” “I never had a drink of beer within 200 miles of Indianapolis,” he said, bending to wipe more sweat! from his hands and averting his gaze from the casket. Once more the authorities opened fire with questions. Schroeder didn’t answer. Pleas 1 that he tell all he knew for the sake of his conscience and his wife j and two sons, brought the reply—“l’ve told all I could.” “Yes, but not all you know, Harold,” detectives snapped. He lit another cigaret and asked his questioners to “Please, stop now.” Detectives halted questioning. “What is it, Harold?" Winkler asked. “Just this, gentlemen. I’ll tell you something after I get to talk to my folks. That’s all I can say now. 11l talk when I grt to see my folks.” *

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After repeating his promise to Sheriff George Winkler “to tell you something after I talk to my folks,” Harold Herbert Schroeder was left undisturbed by interogators in his jail cell today. He was pale, shaken and haggard from the gruelnig ordeal of Thursday afternoon which shattered the iron calm which has characterized his demeanor since his arrest at Mobile, Ala. His sisters, Mrsfl. Feme Sams of Elkhart and Mrs. Faye Speight of Clarion, la., wer to arrrive this afternoon or tonight to talk with their brother, accused of arson and murder in the High School road torch car mystery. Delay Further Questions During the afternoon, Sheriff George Winkler indicated today, Schroeder may be taken to see the ruins of his car, which authorities claim he admitted burning, and to the High School road spot where his car, containing the charred body of an unidentified man, was found blazing early the morning of May 31. That any further questioning may be delayed until it is determined whether he will keep his promise to “tell you something” after talking with his sisters was indicated by officials today. Schroeder desires to talk to his wife, but her arrival in Indianapolis was uncertain today. The bespectacled Mobile (Ala.) radiator dealer received a letter from her tlf? morning. She expressed sympathy for him and her intention to “stand by” him, but gave no indication as to when she will leave Mobile for Indianapolis. Winkler Claims Admissions She assured her husband when ha was brought north after capture at Mobile that she would “be with you by Friday.” Reading the letter, in which Mrs. Schroeder told of difficulty in making collections in his business, Schroeder smiled. “If I could have got one-tenth the publicity for my business I’va got in this case, I would be a millionaire,” he commented. Sheriff George Winkler today declared important admissions have been secured in questioning of Schroeder. “Harold has promised to talk after he sees relatives,” Sheriff Winkler declared. “He wants to see his wife, but may talk after he sees his two sisters.” While Schroeder rested at county jail early today, further clews tending to show the body may be that of Frank Macy, 31, of Cincinnati, 0., were being investigated by police. Check Cincinnati Clew Orville Wilkerson, 1038 Reisnef street, by whom Macy formerly was employed, told police the description of the dead man tallies with that of Macy. Macy’s father operates a filling station and grocery at the outskirts of Cincinnati and Macy had an aunt, whose name was not known to Wilkerson, in Indianapolis. Macy had sandy hair, was of the right weight, 125 to 130 pounds, was 5 feet 7 inches tall and wore clothing similar to the scrap found on the burned body, Wilkerson told police. The corpse tallies with these descriptions and a rosary was found in the ruins. Macy carried a rosary. Sheriff eorge Winkler today declined to a plify his statement that “when Schi ‘der talks the facts will be of a sena. tional nature.” CAR MATH CLIMAXES BRIEF HONEYMOON Bridegroom Killed in Wreck 24 Hours After Wedding. Bu United Press PORTLAND, Ind., June 27. Death ended a honeymoon of less than twenty-four hours Thursday night when Donald Clark, 25, Detroit, was killed in an auto accident on State Road 67, a mile west of Portland. Clark suffered a fractured skull when the auto in which he was riding overturned, and he died two hours later. He was married at Detroit Wednesday night and returned to Portland, his boyhood home, with his bride to spend their honeymoon, SILENT ON CENSORSHIP, Insull Refuses to Discuss Attempt to Prune Envoy’s Speech. Eu United Press NEW YORK, June 27 Samuel Insull, Chicago utilities magnate, refused to discuss his alleged attempts to censor a part of Ambassador Frederica Sackett’s speech dealing with power companies, when he arrived on the Mauretania today. When questioned by reporters, he refused to say anything, and them. It was understood that he would leave for Chicago.

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