Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 105, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1930 — Page 3

SEPT. 10, 193 CL

DICTATORS OF EUROPE GAINING NEW STRENGTH Portugal Latest in Line of One-Man Rule; Others More Powerful. BY RICHARD D. M’MILLAN United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Sept. 10.—The sway of the dictator in Europe, instead of declining, is spreading, and growing more powerful. Students of international politics point to the announcement that Portugal may be considered to have slipped definitely into line with other nations of the old world which are governed by the iron rule of an Individual. General Carmona, for years the energetic, military-minded president of Portugal, entered the ranks of the dictators when he announced the revolutionary plots which have so frequently shaken Portugal. Ideas Like Spanish Group This will be a dictatorship supported by a political group with ideas largely resembling those of neighboring Spain, where one-man rule already has existed for nearly £ decade. Portugal has had eighteen revolutions in as many years. When General Primo de Rivera, the strong man of Spain, died in Paris about six months ago while on vacation, certain circles believed his passing would mark the first breach in the bulwarks of one-man rule in Europe. Then General Berenguer came to imitate the dead statesman and has remined firmly at the helm, despite predictions on all sides that he would not last long. In Poland, Pilsudski, the nation's ''man of iron,” has come back again to power after a brief eclipse. Dictators Riding High The king-dictator of Yugo-Slavia, Alexander, continues doing his job apparently to the satisfaction of his subjects. The self-crowned monarch of Albania, Zogu, previously the national dictator, remains firm in his exalted political seat, supported and comforted by the strong-man tactics of his near-neighbor Signor Mussolini, whose regime goes on despite the daily rumor of flight or assassination. Further east, Mustapha Kernel likewise is in the saddle, modernizing Turkey gradually but fundamentally.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Don Hasting. 3726 North Meridian street. Btudebaker coupe. 773-797, from Washington and Pennsylvania streets. Margaret Stanley. Clayton, Ind., Chevrolet coupe. 583-840. from Liberty and North streets. Johnson Chevrolet Company. 1065 Virginia avenue. Wlllys-Knight sedan. 32-292. from rear of 1035 Virginia avenue. D. R. Graham. 933 Olive stret. Ford truck. T 17-173. from 2217 Bethel avenue. Arthur Group. 1207 Broadway. Ford Tudor. 767-987. from Fifteenth and Lewis streets. Kenneth L. Stanton. 1503 Gimber street. Chrvsler sedan. 73-903. from Meridian and South streets.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to: John Asolund. 1715 Langley avenue. Oakland sedan, tound near Roll course on MUlersvllle road. LONDON DAILY PRINTS NEWS IN LARGE VAN Radio, Rolling: Press Permit Rapid Delivery of Late Items. B >/ United Press _ LONDON, Sept. 10.—Something frew to Londoners in the way of fast delivery of late news to readers has been accomplished by the London evening newspaper, the Star, which regularly is operating a “stop press" printing establishment in its largest delivery van. The equipment comprises a complete composing frame and tyn? cases, and a suction-fed Bush printing machine capable of printing anything up to three thirty-line news items at a speed up to 10,000 copies an hour. News items are received by radio Irom the offices of the Star and are set up and rim off in the so-called blank “fudge column” as fast as they are received. The printing can be done as the van is rushing deliveries to the more distant suburbs, but it is more customary to install the van outside horse races, football, or other sports meetings, enabling the spectators as the meeting breaks up to buy London papers with the very last-second news in them. DEMOCRATS TO HOLD STATE PARK MEETING Committee to Be in Session During' Woman’s Club Rally. Special meeting of the Democratic state committee has been called for the afternoon of Sept. 27 at Turkey Rim state park when the Indiana Democratic Woman's Club w r ill hold its two-day rally. Members of the committee are to report on organization activities in their districts and state candidates will discuss the outlook, according to R. Earl Peters, state chairman. Paul McNutt, dean of the Indiana law school, is to be one of the speakers.

OCT. 1 IS FIRST DATE FOR COOT SHOOTING Season Open Now for Rail Hunting, Game Chief Points Out. Open season on rails (except coot) began Sept. 1, but hunters can not shoot gallinules and rabbits until Oct. 1. it was pointed out today by Walter Shirts, chief of the fish and game division of the state conservation department. In case any gallant hunter doesn't know when he shoots a gallinule, it is described in the dictionary as "a long-toed coot.” The easy rule will he “Don't shoot coot.” Open season on jacksnipe and other waterfowl also begins Oct. 1.

—4O YEARS OF TRUSS FITTING H. E. ZIMMER Establish'd 1890 413 M.jr Kiser Hank Bids.

Children in Rifle Meet

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Marksmanship knows neither sex nor age, and here you see youthful sharpshooters on the firing line at Camp Perry, 0., scene of national rifle and pistol matches. Arlayne Brqwn, 14-year-old St. Louis girl, who has won nineteen medals in competition with foremost adult shots of America, is shown above, sighting her pistol, while in the inset is a group of other children taking part in the junior rifle matches.

2 HURT IN CRASHES Woman’s Leg Fractured in Auto Collision. Two women today were recovering from injuries received Tuesday in traffic accidents, according to hospital records. Mrs. Harry Vondersmith, Bloomington, is in city hospital' suffering from shoulder injuries received when the taxi in which she was riding was struck by a street car at Washington and Delaware streets. Mrs. Samuel Bunes, 40, of 2347 Bellefontaine street, received a right leg fracture Tuesday night when the auto in which she was riding collided with a car driven by Miss M. L. Griffith, 331 Burgess avenue, Broadway and Twenty-fourth street. HEALTH HEADS WILL ATTEND CONVENTION Drs. King, Schweitzer to Go to Ft. Worth, Tex., Oct. 27. Dr. William F. King, director of the state health department, and Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, director of the division of infant and child hygiene, have been ’authorized by the state health board to represent Indiana at the annual convention of the Amencan Public Health Association at Ft. Worth, Tex., Oct. 27-30. Following the Ft. Worth meeting, Dr. King plans to accept the invitation of the Mexican health department to attend a five-day meeting of health officers at Mexico City. Mexico is taking the lead in public health service, Dr. King asserted. Dr. A. J. Hostetler, LaGrange, president of the state health board also may attend the Ft. Worth meeting.

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Ants Fight Fire Blaze Battled in Orderly Manner by ‘Army’ in National Park.

Liu Science Service YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Cal., Sept. 10.—The black ants are among the world’s most expert fire-fighters, is the conclusion of Ranger F. S. Garl of Yosemite national park. Ranger Gavl believes that human beings might find it worth while to study their tactics. Describing one blaze, caused by a lighted match near a big black ant hill, Ranger Garl said that about fifty ants started promptly for the fire and jumped right into it kicking and biting. Meanwhile, other ants kept on with their work. Then a lighted cigaret was thrown near the match, and a larger force of ants hastened to the scene and destroyed the cigaret. Some of the heroic little firemen were burned to death, or so badly burned that others killed them. But for every ant disabled, another took its place. After the fire was out. other ants were sent to pick up the fallen. Throughout the emergency, lasting half an hour, the fire was fought in the most orderly manner, attesting to a highly efficient organization, Ranger Garl said. Postoffice to Be Enlarged Bu ’I nvest Special KOKOMO, Ind., Sept. 10.—Work is expected to begin Nov. 1 on an addition to the Kokomo postofflee which will double present floor space. Former Official Dies NEW ALBANY, Ind., Sept. 10. John D. Mitchell, 68, one of three Republicans elected Floyd county auditor in forty years, is dead.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HOBO HONORED IN DEATH BY POLICE FORCE Seeking Job; Killed Under Train Trying to Rush to Penniless Family. Bu railed Press CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—Herman Eiler, 26, who rede into Chicago six weeks ago as a hobo, will leave the city in state. He is dead. Eight policemen will pay his fare home. Out of work and money, Eiler left his wife and four children in Cheyenne, Wyo., a month and a half ago and came here on a freight train. He looked for work, but found only promises. Last Satrday he received a letter. His hands trembled as he finished reading, it. He ran several blocks to a railway right-of-way. Excited and unnerved, he attempted to board the first train that passed going west. It was a fast train. A Brookfield policeman found Eiler, crushed and broken, on the right-of-way. In the man’s pocket Chief Edward O’Connor of the suburban force found the letter. It was from Eiler’s wife. It said the authorities were going to send her and the children to the county home, and that rather than go she would kill the children and herself. There are only eight men on the Brookfield force, but they raised S2O quickly and sent it to Mrs. Eiler. As she received it Tuesday her husband died. Now the police are going to pay Eiler’s way back home. BRING SUIT TO MAKE STOCKHOLDERS LIABLE State Savings and Trust Depositors Also Ask Receiver Collector. Suit by creditor-depositors of the State Savings and Trust Company to make stockholders of the institution liable in the amounts of their stock has been filed in superior court two. More than five hundred depositors are represented in the action. Request that a receiver be appointed to collect amounts due tlie depositors was made in the complaint, plaintiffs in which are Carl J. Winkler, Mrs. Pearl Winkler, Mrs. Joseph M. Toole and George Pyritz. Sewer and Plant Ordered Bu Times Site rial WASHINGTON, Ind., Sept. 10. The city of Washington has been instructed by the state board of health to act immediately toward construction of a sewage disposal plant and sanitary sewer.

Thirty thousand welcoming shouts as he steps to bat V a . . the idol of them all. Ball one! JHOME RUNS are made at the *" * plate not on the bench!

Left Him Cold Paris Hop Joke May Have Been Funny, but Not to Coste Manager.

Bu Lniteii Press NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—Dieudonne Coste and Colonel Lindbergh may assume a perfect pose of nonchalance at the prospect of an ocean flight, but to Rene Racover, Coste’s American manager, the possibility of a trip to Paris by air is no joke. Racover reveiled this when he landed at Valley Stream, L. 1., after a hop from Washington. Some of the staff at the field noted that Racover was pale and apparently shaken. Then Martel Doret, Racover’s pilot confessed that he was “having a little fun” at Racover’s expense. When the Lockheed ship left Newark Tuesday for Long Island after accompanying Coste and Bellonte from Washington, Doret pointed the craft in the general direction of Paris. Reaching the Atlantic, Doret motioned to Racover that they were now Paris bound. Racover, according to Doret didn’t relish the idea. After explaining that he was lacking in wardrobe and other essentials, he finally prevailed upon Doret to turn back. PREPARE FOR RALLY G. 0. P. Expects 25,000 to Attend Barbecue. A table, “a quarter of a mile in length,” will be used in serving the 25,000 Indiana Republicans expected to attend the rally and barbecue at Linton Thursday. Three hundred women members of the Greene county Republican organization will serve the twentyeight beefs and forty-six sheep which will be barbecued. Senators James E. Watson and Arthur R. Robinson, Governor Harry G. Leslie, Ray Sisson, Second district congressional nominee, and Mrs. C. W. Boucher, Valparaiso, will be the speakers. Worker Killed in Fall Bu 7'imes Snecial MARION, Ind., Sept. 10.—C. Leroy Stanton, 34, was killed instantly when he fell eighty feet from a scaffold while working at the Grant County Sand and Gravel Company pit. He W'as a World war veteran. He leaves his widow and an 8-year-old son. Anderson Woman in Bankruptcy Katherine C. Langell, Anderson, Ind., has filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition in federal court, listing $45,107 liabilities and $12,373 assets.

NORTH CHINESE RULERS CRUSH ‘RED MENACE’ Soviet Views Given Short Shrift in Vast Region Near Frontier. BY D. C. BESS United Tress Staff Correspondent PEIPING, Sept. 10.—The vast, remote region just this side of the Siberian frontier once more has turned to the task of crushing Soviet influence. Alarmed by the sensational success of Communist raids south of the Yangtze river, war lords of north China have revived the campaign of “extermination,” instituted aganist the Bolsheviks by the late Marshal Chang Tso-Lin, Manchuria overlord. Today Chinese even remotely suspected of connection with Soviet Russia are being rounded up and held in jail or executed. Short Shrift in Manchuria Old Chang thoroughly disfiked and feared everything which came out of F.ussia. Soviet ideas were repulsive to him. Eyery so often he rounded up persons of doubtful notions, young and old, and shot them without much discussion or investigation. His son and successor, Chang Hseuh-Liang, was, as a son, more liberal. But since his accession, the young marshal is almost as reactionary as his father was, and Communists get short shrift in Manchuria. There seems little likelihood that a “Soviet menace” will make headway in Manchuria for a long time to come. Special Hunting Machine Marshal Yen Hsi-Shan, the “model governor” of Shansi province, equally is suspicious of radical ideas and radical persons. A special “hunting machine” to ferret out Communists has been established in Peiping this summer by General "Wang Hsi-Fu, Marshal Yen’s director of the bureau of public safety. There is small probability of radical demonstrations in Peiping while this machine functions. CORNER STONE RITE SET School’s Head, Teachers, Pupils to Take Part in Program. Corner stone of the new School 81, Brookside parkway and Nineteenth street, will be laid at a ceremony at 2 Friday, Sept. 19. Superintendent Paul C. Stetson, board members, teachers, pupils and patrons will participate. The school will be ready for use by the second semester.

Directs Relief

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Relief work in the hurricanestricken Dominican republic is being directed personally by President Rafael Trujillo, above. The entire army of the little island nation has been mobilized under his orders to give aid to the thousands of storm sufferers and to assist in burial of the dead. STORE ROBBED OF SIOO Grocery Thieves Pry Open Door, Discover Hidden Money. Thieves who pried open the front door of a Standard grocery at State avenue and Washington street early today took SIOO hidden in a chicken feed bin. Merchandise valued at $5 also was taken.

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M’MILLAN SHIP IS BACK FROM TRIP TO ARCTIC Explorer Ends 13th Voyage to Far North; Seven Boys on Journey. Bu Liiited Press BOOTHBAY HARBOR, Me., Sept. 10.—The veteran Arctic schooner Bowdoin was back in Maine waters today, marking the end of Commander Donald B. MacMillan's thirteenth expedition into the far north. The trim white vessel, bearing seven men and seven boys, besides her famous skipper, put in here on Tuesday night after an uneventful homeward cruise from beyond the Arctice Circle. She was expected to proceed today to Wiscasset, her home port. In contrast to most of Commander MacMillan's previous expeditions, the journey just ended did not have scientific exploration as its paramount purpose. When the Bowdoin sailed from Wiscasset last June 21, she carried forty desks and miscellaneous schoolroom equipment, which were installed in the Eskimo school which MacMillan erected last year near his scientific experiment station at Nain, Labrador. The youngest member of the expedition, and possibly the youngest person ever to visit the far north, was MacMillian’s cabin boy, William A. Thomas Jr., 10, of Chicago, whose father went as ship’s doctor.