Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1930 — Page 19

SEPT. 19, 1930

EXPECT BRITAIN I WILL ABANDON ! YACHTCONTEST Canada, Spain or Germany May Send Next America’s Cup Challenger. BY MORRIS DL HAVEN TRACY Cnited Pr*s Staff Correspondent NEWPORT. R. 1.. Sept. 19. Yachtsmen look to Canada. Spain or Germany for the next challenge to race for the America's cup. Failure of Sir Thomas Lipton's fifth attempt to win the “old mug” lor England, and the general lack of enthusiasm among Englishmen here over the details of the competition. gave rise today to a. definite belief that it may be many years before Great Britain again attempts to bring home the trophy which the yacht America, won in 1851. - In Canada, of recent years there has been a growing interest in yachting. Canada builds good yachts and her sailors from the maritime provinces are regarded particularly 8s being as competent as any in the world. Spain May Enter Race - The interest, of King Alfonso of Spain in yachting brought Spain tnto the speculation. Some thought at not, too great a. stretch of the imagination to picture the king himself sending a. yacht, here Germany is considered because or its recent, desire to gain prestige. At heavy loss it has sent the Graf Jseppelin around the world to Amertca and to South America largely for the purpose of directing attention to the capabilities of Germany. Though it would cost, a million dollars to race a yacht for the cup. -victory would be well worth the price t,o a nation which, bereft of Iks military power and shorn of its vrade when the war ended, set out to replace what it had lost in the wav of prestige, through peaceful means Lipton Out of Competition Belief that, the British will not toon race again is based on the general dissatisfaction Britishers felt over the Enterprise was a mechanized yacht. Britishers feel that, the Enterprise was out, of the realm of yachting, which they, seemingly, interpreted as a sport, where man does all the work with his own hands and disdains the use of mechanical devices. Sir Thomas Lipton, now past 80, is through, for he considers this his last challenge. Business Man Fatally Hurt Bui lines Bnevial LAFAYETTE, Ind , Sept. 19.-Paul K Barcus, 41. head of the Barcus Trucking Company, here and the 'Barcus orchards at Crawfordsville, us dead of injuries suffered Tuesday In an automobile accident,

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‘Big Bill’ Thompson Expected to Rim Again—and Likely Win

Chicago Mayor Is Not Out of the Picture, Declare Wise Ones: Gang Rule Is Deplored by Randolph. BY BRUCE CATTON NEA Service Writer (Coovrlßht. 1930. NEA Service, lac.) CHICAGO. Sept. 19.—" We will never get the gang situation in hand here until we have a decent city administration and a man in charge of the police department who has an absolutely ;ree hand.” With these words Colonel Robert Isham Randloph, presid.-nt of the Chicago Association of Commerce, whose famed “Secret Six” dug into the tangled mess that forced itself on Chicago's attention following the murder of reporter Alfred J. Lingle. sums up the city's prospects for a return to law and order- " Suppose,” said Colonel Randolph, “that a police officer goes out and raids a gambling joint. Next day an alderman comes in to the officer's superiors and raises a. row because the joint's owner was a friend of his. “What happens? The officer gets sent 'to the woods,’ and he isn't very eager to make any more raids after that. We've got to have a new deal. Election Is a Gamble "What it comes down to,” added Colonel Randolph sadly, “is that we have to vote one gang of damn rascals out. of office and trust to luck that the gang we replace them with will be more satisfactory.” Chicago has anew mayoralty election on the horizon. William Hale Thompson, who has been indulging in a huge amount of silence ever since Lingle’s dramatic murder let, lose a storm of public indignation about the heads of local law enforcement agencies, has some seven months yet to serve, rt is expetced that he will run for re-election. An impression has grown up. outside of Chicago, that. Mayor Thompson—Big Bill, of the picturesque. England-hating campaigns will fade quietly out of the picture, and will be seen no more at city hall after next winter’s election. Thompson Not Out Consequently it is something of a. surprise to discover that most of the city's political wiseacres are not expecting anything of the kind. They believe that Mayor Thompson will be a candidate to succeed himself. They believe, also, that he will have a very strong chance of winning renomination in the Republican primaries, and a very fair chance of winning re-election in the final vote. “That, man," said one political leader here, “can go into any pri-

j <^PENrT§mA^/ '^ F- - Robert Isham Randolph

mary with at least 300,000 y votes in his pocket. He can count on that many votes in advance. “He's as smart a campaigner as there is in America. You'll make the mistake of your life if you start counting him out of the picture now.” Thompson's political machine is still strong. Os recent, months he has been keeping quiet. He says little for publication. “The rumor has gone around that his health is failing and that he will be glad to drop out of public life when his term ends, seven months hence. “But those who profess familiarity with political affairs here sqpff at this rumor Thompson, they say, ! will be back with all his old gusto j when the next campaign begins.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

APPLES SPECIAL CARLOAD SALE SATURDAY GRAVENSTEINS $4 QO Exta Fine Quality, I Per Bushel Basket ■■ Maiden Blush Apples, Bushel . . . $l5O Wealthies and Others, Bushel $1.25 POTATOES '££“■sl.so HAMILL BROS, -Fr JUST SOUTH OF ELEVATION

LEARNING CITY LIFE COSTLY FOR WOODSJOUTH Pays S4OO for Breaking Up Surveyor’s Instrument He, Thinks Is Camera. Bv United Prete CHICAGO, Sept. 19.—Chris Longhini, trapper and woodsman from Gogebic county, Michigan, has learned the difference between a camera and a theodolite, but it was an expensive lesson. Chris, who is 34, came here recently to work in a factory, and learn city ways. The woodsman selected the newspapers as his text books. Many of the pictures he saw were of gangsters. Always, he noticed, they had their faces covered. He concluded there was some sort of a game between the photographers and the gangsters and that the gangsters were it. Walking along Michigan avenue Thursday, Chris suddenly found himself face to face with an odd looking thing on a tripod. It looked to him like a fancy camera. Behind the tripod was a man, waving his arms. Chris grasped the situation quickly. The man was a photographer, and he, Chris Longhini, an honest trapper, was being mistaken for a gangster, he concluded With a bellow or rage, the woodsman charged, knocked over the “photographer,” picked up the “camera” and smashed it to bits against a hydrant. Convinced in court that the "camera” was a theodolite and the “photographer” a surveyor, Christ paid for the instrument. It cost him S4OO. Over-production of cotton spinning factories in Poland has been curtailed by agreement *to operate only one shift daily

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