Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 265, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
WINS DIVORCE, BUT NEIGHBORS 'LOSE' SCANDAL Expected Sensations Don’t Materialize for Large Crowd in Court. A neighborhood that flocked Into the court, of Superior Judge Joseph R. Williams to watch the clothespins of evidence hang up matrimony’s dirty wash were disappointed today. They came to hear Richard N. Allen of the Linden hotel obtain a divorce from Mrs. Mae Allen, 3232 -North Illinois street. Allen got the divorce. Mrs. Allen was given custody of their 12v car-old son, Richard Jr., and alimony of $6 a week, but the neighborhood received not one morsel of vidence bordering on a sensation. Sensation Was Forecast The sensation was forecast in ■hat Allen charged In his divorce complaint that tils wife had associated with William F. Swope, a married man. Mrs. Florence Swope, 3828 Rookwood, testified for Allen. She merely related in a few words that Mrs. Allen was the co-respondent named by her (Mrs. Swope) in a divorce suit now pending against Swope in the circuit court at Greenfield, Ind. She testified the two families were friendly and had gone on outings together.
Judge Williams In granting Allen the decree after Mrs. Allen had dismissed a cross-complaint for divorce said, “This is a case where there’s too much intimacy between families. Both husband and wife have lost confidence in each other and it’s no use their remaining man and wife. It wouldn’t be so bad if there were no child.’’ Asks SIO,OOO Damage A suit charging alienation of affections and asking SIO,OOO damages is pending in superior court five against Swope. The suit was filed by Allen. He alleged embarrassment in his neighborhood through Swope’s allege! friendship for his wife as causes of action in both the alienation suit and the divorce action today. The divorce complaint charged Mrs. Allen had written endearing letters to Swope, but was amended by his attorney and tried on the charge made by Mrs. Swope. Expectation on the part of the neighborhood visitors to the court that the alleged endearing letters might be brought in as evidence crowded the rear of the room, but left their appetites unsatisfied when the contested marital action came to a quick finale. Clews Lacking in Brown Case as Rumors Fly BY ARCH STEINEL NASHVILE, Ind., March 17.—Like the “once-upon-a-time” of the lady from Timbuctoo who met a sergeant of the Foreign Legion in Algiers and who had a cousin in Afghanistan who told him that the washerwoman’s son of a New York millionaire told his milkman that the greataunt of a Chicago gangster whispered to —like this does rumor and tiles fly regarding the murder mystery on the farm of Lee Brown. Monday, Prosecutor Howard Robinson of Franklin, received a telephone call that a skirt believed to be that of Mrs. Brown had been found in the farm home ruins. Skirt Clew Valueless The message was relayed to the state fire marshal's office. Virgil Quinn, deputy state fire marshall, went to Nashville. He found that the piece of goods might have been lying on the farm for several years or several days. Natives of Brown county joke about the rumors prevalent and give them added roll with verbal shoves. Purported indictments, purported radio bulletins, purported arrests, are bandied as facts until pinned down as fabrications. Every visitor to Nashville is eyed with the comment, “another one going out to the Brown farm.” Inclement weather has hindered thorough search of the farm. Search Reveals Trinkets A party of searchers headed by John F. Wright, deputy prosecuting attorney, dug into the ruins Monday. They uncovered valueless household trinkets such as sewing shears and tweezers. Possibility that a third body may be found at the farm is seen if wooded land and gulleys near the razed home are examined. Quinn said several angles in the myptcry were being investigated and that his . report would not be completed for some time. Quinn returned to Indianapolis Monday night but it expected back in Nashville the latter part of the week. Man Injured by Car Horace Gamble, 27, of 2223 Lyndhurst drive, suffered severe leg injuries this afternoon when he was struck by an auto driven by Emory Wallace, 1545 Hiatt street, at Lambert street and Belmont avenue. He was taken to city hospital.
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Aviators Visit Recalls Thrilling Ocean Rescue
When Lieutenant Walter Hinton noted aviator, arrives in Indianapolis Friday to address the Exchange Club here he will see again a face that was a member of a group highly welcome to the flier in the Caribbean sea off Cuba several years ago. It is that of M. K. Ryan, 413 Harvard place, serving with the Marine corps when Lieutenant Hinton first attempted a non-stop flight from North to South America. A short time after the flier passed Cuba his motor quit and
GUARD CHILD DEATHSUSPECT Mob Violence Is Threatened for Accused Killer. By United Press JOHNSTOWN, Pa., March 17. Harry Starchok, 28, odd-jobs man, was removed to city jail today to prevent possible mob violence after he allegedly confessed killing Betty Mowry, 7-year-old daughter of his neighbor in Conemaugh, near here. Betty was attacked, choked and beaten with a hatchet- last Friday, according to the confession, assertedy obtained by District Attorney D. P. Weimer, Cambria county. Guided by Starchok, police went to the attic of his home, where the body was found wedged beneath the floor in a burlap bag. “I don’t know why I did it,” police quoted Starchok as saying. When cries of crowds about the Conemaugh jail grew into threats of “lynch him,” police spirited the accused man away to Johnstown jail. BONUSES SPEEDED All Hoosier Veterans May Get Checks in Month. With receipt of another $1,000,000 for bonus loans, possibility that all Hoosier veterans applying for adjusted compensation certificate loans would receive checks within the next four weeks was announced today by John H. Ale, regional manager of the United States veterans’ bureau. Approximately two million dollars already have been distributed in Indiana. “The 15,000 applications now pending will be mailed out at the rate of 1,000 a day,” Ale declared. An additional force of twelve clerks was granted the bureau Monday, making a force of twentyone clerks working on Indiana applications. IRISH TO CELEBRATE St. Patrick’s Day to Be Capped With Frolic. Celebration in honor of St. Patrick will be held tonight at Tomlinson hall by members of the Marion county organization of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. A five-reel motion picture of scenes in Ireland will be shown, and Irish airs will be played and sung by the Great Hoosier quartet, the Newsboys band, St. John’s orchestra, Junior Melody Boys and Russ Holler’s orchestra. A dance mull conclude the entertainment.
Model Pat on Display
’ ■ 4 - 1 Sk Pasteboard model of Christ I church, on Monument Circle, was * on display today in the display window of the H. Lieber Company, '|v x \ 0 \ 24 West Washington street. The i model was made by Wilfred Ladigo, 768 Lexington avenue, who ? spent five weeks on the task. • Ladigo also is making a model .1 in. i ". 1 1 : ... ... it..
When an English bulldog, of Mike’s proportions, lunges toward the camera, it’s no wonder the shutter clicks. Celebrating St. Patrick’s day in a green harness prepared for him by his owner, 732 Fletcher avenue, Mike gave a canine interpretation of “The Girl I Left Behind Me,” as he eyed the shiny lens in The Times p h o t o g rapher’s camera. The girl he left behind him is Miss Florence Deppe, assistant society editor of The Times.
he had to make a forced landing. Twenty miles away Ryan was standing watch on a deck of the U. S. S. Denver, and with several mates saw the plane go down. They spread the alarm and steamed to within a mile of where Lieutenant Hinton had fallen. Guided by searchlights on the Denver, a life-boat put out to rescue the aviator. He was found standing in the cockpit of his almost submerged plane, fighting off swarms of maneating sharks that infested the tropic waters. Both the flier and the plane were taken aboard the Denver, and Lieutenant Hinton left the ship to return to the United States for anew plane. “We saw him some time after that, on a bright day, flying over the same vicinity on his way to South America, and he reached his goal this time without a mishap,” Ryan said.
CAMP QUOTA IS NEARLY FILLED C. M. T. C. Applications Flood Office, Head Says. Enrollment for the citizens military training camps to be held this summer will be closed within a short time, if the present flood of applicants continues, according to Norman Metzger, Indianapolis Service Club chairman, sponsoring the enrollment. Sixty per cent of the Marion county quota was filled today, although enrollment was begun only seventeen days ago. Most Indianapolis youths will attend the camp at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, starting June 9. State and corps area quotas are filled. Partial list of the citizens’ committee named by the Service Club to aid in enrollments includes Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Frederic M. Ayres. E. W. Harris, Otto P. Deluse, Wallace O. Lee, Hilton U. Brown, Herbert M. Woollen, Felix M. McWhlrter, Hugh B. Baker, J. Duane Dugan, Dr. Herbert T. Wagner, B. F. Lawrence and Nicholas H. Noyes. L. S. Ayres & Cos. is one of several Indiana stores and industries encouraging employes to attend the camps, making it possible for outstanding employes to participate as a reward of merit. Enrollments are being received at 510 Meridian Life building. BOY’SCHANCE SMALL After Two Weeks in Machine, Pneumonia Sets In. By United Press CHICAGO, March 17. The chances for recovery of a 7-year-old boy who has lived for more than two weeks in an artificial respirator, diminished today when a sudden attack of pneumonia weakened his condition. The boy, Charles Caughey, was placed in the respirator early this month. He was suffering from paralysis of, the throat and lungs caused by diphtheria. Smoking Wife Sued CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., March 17.--Smoking cigarets in the presence of friends and neighbors is alleged in a divorce suit filed by Harry Lawton against Mrs. Thelma Lawton. He also alleges cruelty and that his wife threatened him with bodily harm. They were married two years ago.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
2 ROOMS, BATH GIVEN HOOVER ON BATTLESHIP Suite Will Be President’s Quarters on Trip Through South. By United Press WASHINGTON, March 17.—Two rooms and bath with a brass bed instead of the traditional sailor’s hammock are being prepared for President Hoover aboard the battleship Arizona, on which he will visit Porto Rico and the Virgin islands. Mr. Hoover and his party expect to leave Washington by train late Wednesday night and sail from Norfolk early Thursday. Galley space has been reserved for a White House chef if Mr. Hoover cares to bring one. And a forehanded navy has allotted storage space for any special delicacies the President might send aboard to vary the regular navy fare. Are no Windows The two rooms and bath to be used by Mr. Hoover are known as the admiral’s suite. Even cruisers nowadays contain such comfortable if not luxurious quarters for high ranking officers. The most nautical feature of the admiral’s suite aboard the Arizona is the absence of windows. Even admirals or Presidents must be content with portholes if they will travel on a naval vessel. Coming as she does from twentyone months of modernization, the Arizona is a model from plumbing to blisters, the latter being bulges along the water line designed to frustrate torpedoes directed at the vitals of the ship. There is a shower with plenty of good hot water in the admiral’s bath, which for a time is to be used by a president. Silver Service Provided Furniture in the suite is mahogany. The combined mess and lounging room is a comfortable haven of easy chairs, and if Mr. Hoover cares to entertain he may do so with a handsome silver service. Modern plumbing does not make a warship. The service record of the Arizona does not show she ever fired a hostile shot but the big craft is better prepared to do so now than when she was launched at the New York navy yard in 1916. In the process of modernization, the Arizona has substituted two tripod masts for the cage masts with which she was first equipped. Her 14-inch guns have been elevated to increase their range and the secondary battery of five-inch pieces will tilt a bit higher and shoot a bit farther now than they would before. The modernized vessel has added five-inch anti-air-craft guns to her armament, and the blisters are new. Captain Was Official Astronomer Captain Charles S. Freeman, who commanded transports—Manchuria, Orizaba and Maui—during the war, is the Arizona’s skipper having been transferred from command of the naval observatory here last year. As commander of the observatory, he was the official government astronomer and was responsible for keeping the country advised of the correct time. The Arizona’s war service in 191718 was along the east coast of the United States. In November, 1918, the ship was ordered to join the American battleships operating with the British grand fleet. Her guns, among many, saluted President Wilson aboard the George Washington after the war. Serving in the eastern Mediterranean during the Graeco-Turk-ish war, the Arizona landed her marine guard at Smyrna. NOT WEAKER SEX Men Wear More Clothes in in Winter Time. By United Press PULLMAN, Wash., Feb. 17.—Men live in tropical climates, while women exist in Alpine atmosphere during the winter months, according to Helen K. Robson, Washington Stats college home economics instructor. Men wear more clothes in proportion to their weight, than women, and more than nature equips its animals with, who must r§ly upon one fur coat. The average man wears fifteen pounds of clothing during winter months, she declared. Women wear about a tenth as much in proportion to their weights. Slayer Buried Today By United Press MONTICELLO, Ind., March 17. Funeral services for Sheriff Ray Fisher, White county, who was slain by Scott Talbott, bank ro’*' suspect, Sunday, will be held here Wednesday afternoon, under auspices of the American Legion. Scott Talbutt, who killed the sheriff, his brother William and himself was buried beside his brother in a double services today.
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MTNTOSHMAY LOSE POST AS COMMISSIONER Virgil Simmons Is Hinted for Job on Public Service. Board. Specualtion was rife at the ' statehouse today regarding important state governmental positions that will be open for the naming of incumbents or succes- ! sors when Governor Harry G. Leslie returns from his fortnight of ! yachting off the Florida Keys.
Stress was being placed in political circles on action to be taken by the Governor on two public service commissioners whose terms expire May 1. They are Commissioners Howell Ellis (Rep.), and Calvin Mclntosh (Dem.) No doubt has been expressed regarding the Ellis r e a p p o intment.
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He was made commissioner for a four-year term by former Governor Ed Jackson, being promoted from the positipn of commission secretary. But the improbability of Mclntosh’s being reappointed was looming, due largely to the unsatisfactory settlement of the Southern Indiana Telephone and Telegraph Company scandal, still pending where it started in the office of Attorney-General James M. Ogden. Simmons Is Mentioned Ogden still insists that Mclntosh was involved and that Governor Leslie has assured him that he will not reappoint Mclntx>sh when his term expires May 1. Mclntosh remains hopeful. Most prominently mentioned Democrat for the post is Representative Virgil Simmons, Bluffton, attorney and Eighth district Democratic chairman. , Simmons, familiarly known as “Skits,” is said to be satisfactory to the utilities, which is in his favor with the Leslie administration. Secretary Marshall Williams of the Democratic state committee also has been mentioned. Matter to Be Ironed Out That the matter may be thoroughly ironed out by the time the Governor returns Is the general belief. On the yachting trip are advisers greatly interested in utility affairs. They include Norman Perry, former president of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company, and now vice-president of the Utility Power and Light Corporation, a holding company; Harry Boggs, utility accountant; Henry Marshall, Lafayette publisher and capitalist, and Attorney John Ruckelshaus. Other appointments up shortly include Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner of the state board of accounts, May 1; Chairman Albert J. Wedeking of the state highway commission, April 23: Chairman Roscoe Kiper of the state industrial board May 31. All are slated for reappointment, according to predictions. BERT THURMAN ILL Ear Infection Keeps G. 0. P. Committepian Down. M. Bert Thurman, Republican national committeman from Indiana, was at his home today recovering from an infection in his ear. The Republican political leader became ill two weeks ago, and when the infection developed into boils was taken to St. Vincent’s hospital. SENATOR MORROW IN EUROPE ON ‘VACATION’ Congressman Declines to Discuss Navy Pact on Arrival. By United Press SOUTHAMPTON, England, March 17.—Senator Dwight W. Morrow arrived aboard the liner Leviathan today “on a vacation” and declined to discuss the Franco Italian naval agreement until he had talked to American Ambassador Charles G. Dawes. Morrow was accompanied by his wife. “I am really on the first vacation I have had for three years,” Morrow said. “I had a pleasant crossing, and that is all I can say now.” Morrow said that he was not informed on press reports that the United States is concerned over Britain’s pledge to France to cooperate In the reduction of the number of capital ships.
B&o folks take a real pleasB 5 ore In doing the little ex*ra gpjgh 1.4 ( things that make traveling a ; comfort and a Joy. The National Limited to NEW YORK —with through steeper to Washington The newest and finest of equipment. All-Pullman, Cincinnati to Washington; observation-library-lounge car, club car, Colonial diners, barber, valet, train secretary, maid, manicure, shower bath. Through sleeper from Indianapolis to Washington. Those good B & O meals in Colonial Diners. Daily from Indianapolis at 4:30 p. nu Ar. Washington. . . 11:00 a.m. Ar. NewTork (42nd St.) 4:39 p. m. For tickets and reservations J. G. Van Norsdall, Assistant General Passenger Agent 114 Monument Circle, Telephone Lincoln 6404 Baltimore & Ohio April *6th, 1931 * Sixth Anniversary National IlnlOi
Irish Eyes Are Smiling
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“When Irish eyes are smiling—” Well, you can just bet your shamrock that these Irish eyes are smiling on St. Patrick’s day, for their possessors are Irish as far back as their family trees go, and on both sides, too. The closeup is of Maureen O’Sullivan, dainty film star who recently came to this country from Dublin, while the young lady with the Irish geranium is none other than Nancy Carroll, also of the movies, whose proud boast is that “my mother was born in County Roscommon and my father in County Clare.”
13 CARS OPEN TEST RUN AT SPEEDWAY
Gas, Oil Requirements Wear on Parts, Drivers to Be Studied. Thirteen automobiles at 8 a. m. today started the first of a series of long grinds on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval in fuel tests directed by the American Automobile Association. The cars, all stock models of standard make and painted white, moved forward from the starting wire to run 1,000 miles at 25 miles an hour. The series of runs and tearing down of the cars after tests will AIR CRASH EXPLAINED Court Blames Lost Gas for R-101 Tragedy. By United Press LONDON, March 17.—-The crash of the dirigible R-101 on a hillside in France last October was described today as due to loss of gas in the front gasbags and not to any defect in structure of the craft. The Daily Herald, revealing the findings of a court of inquiry into the disaster in which forty-six men lost their fives, said the loss of gas was caused by a tear in the upper cover of the great airship, due to exceptionally stormy conditions which the dirigible encountered just before it fell near Beauvais. EXTRADITION IS WAIVED Alleged Columbia City Bandit to Face Minnesota Trial. By United Press MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., March 17. —lndiana authorities will make no attempt to extradite Philip (Flippy) Share to Columbia City until he has been tried here on a charge of murder, it was reported today. Share’s trial on a charge of kill* ing Sam (Doc) Miller, a Minneapolis underworld character, is scheduled to start Friday in district court. Meanwhile, it was reported that a witness brought here from Columbia City had identified Share as a bandit who participated in a bank robbery there. The witness was Alonzo Hire. War Veteran Dies FT. WAYNE, Ind., March 17. John L. Rosecrance, 35, a lieutenant during the World war, who was wounded at Chateau Thierry, died here of a throat infection.
require thirty days at the track. The tests, to determine facts about gasoline and oil consumption and wear on various parts of the cars, are being financed by the Standard Oil Company as part of its research program. Cars to Be Torn Down At the completion of the 1,000mile run the cars will be put through runs of 500 miles at thirtyfive miles an hour; 400 at forty-five miles an hour and 100 miles at fifty-five miles an hour. These are known as preliminary tests. Then the cars will be torn down and each working part measured and checked against original dimensions. Reassembled, the autos will take the track for two 1,000-mile tests at 30 miles an hour and four additional 1,000-mile runs at 55 miles an hour. Fifty to Drive The cars, except for numbers and letters, are painted white to insure safety in night driving on the track. In the' preliminary tests the cars will run from 8 a. m. to midnight daily. T. E. Allen, contest board secretary of the A. A. A., is in charge and fifty trained A. A. A. drivers will wheel the cars in the tests. The drivers are third-year pupils of the Wilbur Wright high school of Detroit, taking automotive courses. They work in two shifts, each driver being relieved after driving three hours. Riding Comfort Tested In connection with the event, special tests of riding qualities of the cars and the nervous reaction of the drivers are being made under direction of Professor Ammon Swope of Purdue university. The drivers fill out blanks after each trip, reporting noises and their effect on the driver, engine odors, roars and rumbles, comfort of seat and upholstery and similar factors. Other test officials are G. Wall, Indianapolis, consulting engineer; Charles Merz and Kimbark Howell, Indianapolis, unit supervisors; W. D. (Eddie) Edenburn, Detroit, chief of personnel; William Taylor, Detroit, technical supervisor, and E. Van Hambach, Detroit. Harry J. Saladin, Standard Oil Company technical division chief, and Conger Reynolds, public relations director, represent the company.
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SEEK HOOVER i PRESSURE FOR N, YJOUIRY Probers Are Investigating Death of Another Girl ‘Framing’ Witness, By United Prete NEW YORK, March 17.—Inter, ventlon of President Herbert Hoover was sought today in the fight to authorize a general legislative inquiry into the New York City administration. Meanwhile officials investigated the death of another witness against vice squad policemen accused of “framing” girls. W. Kingsland Macy left Monday night for Washington to ask the President to use his influence on the two Westchester Republican state senators whose votes control the passage of the resolution for a city investigation. The senators are Seabury C. Mastick and Walter Westall, and they so far have op. posed the resolution which is pend-' j ing before the legislature. Autopsy Is Ordered Dr. John Holmes, chairman of the’’ I city affairs committee, announced j charges against Mayor Jimmy ! Walker would be put in final shape ! today, for delivery to Governor i Rooeevelt. An autopsy was ordered performed on the body of Georgia Gray, redhaired dancing girl who died Saturday night in Bellevue hospital of an illness diagnosed as pneumonia. She was registered under the name of Violet Smith. It was not until Monday that her body was identified by a ninvestigator from the district attorney’s office. Although the pneumonia diagnosis was believed to be correct, Thomas A. Gonzales, assistant medical examiner, ordered the autopsy when he learned her identification. Setback to Prosecutor Miss Gray’s death is another severe setback to the prosecution of vice squad men by Chief Magistrate Corrigan, already weakened by the disappearance of the stool pigeorr, Harry Gibson, who jumped $7,500 bail in Baltimore. Miss Gray had testified in the trial of Leigh Halpern, vice squad; patrolman, on “framing” charges, and was to have testified against his partner, Daniel Sullivan. She was from Augusta, Ga., and ' had appeared In the “Vanities," “Hit the Deck” and “Animal Crackers.” Jimmy Suffers Sunburn By United Press PALM SPRINGS, Cal., March 17. —Mayor James J. Walker of New York nursed sunburned shoulders today, but the pain of them did not stop him in his determination to regain his health through “desert baths.” Following suggestions of winter colony members, Walker planned to continue l?*s tw r o sunbaths daily in a flamboyant, topless tent on the estate of Samuel Untermeyer, New York attorney. He hoped the sunburn, the result of a trifle too much sudden exposure to the desert sun, would be turned to a healthy tan through application of cocoanut oil—and more sunshine. The New York executive was settled in the Untermyer residence after moving his twenty-four trunks from the hotel where he spent his first two nights. His routine was typical of the desert—arises with the sun and goes to bed early, with the sun baths of fifteen or twenty minutes duration morning and afternoon. Mayor Walker has informed Governor James Rolph Jr. that he could not accept an invitation to visit San Francisco because he plans to leave Palm,Springs and return directly to New York within a fortnight.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: - Wesley Rtppy, R. R. 2, Box 88. Ford coupe, 745-923, from Ohio street and Senate avenue. Fred Ferguson. 1852 North Pennsylvania street. Buick sedan, 35-976, from Capitol avenue and Georgia street. Max C. Vaught. Franklin. Ind., Chevrolet coach 225-033, from Eleventh street and Capitol av'enue. Frank Buckner. 2725 North Meridian street, Chevrolet sedan. 36-700, from Indiana avenue and West street. Edward A. Imus. 941 Kin* avenue. Whippet roadster, from rear or 941 King avenue. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Shelie Browes. 109 North Elder avenue. Chevrolet coupe, found at Michigan street and Hanson avenue. Nash coupe. 79-600 (1930). found at 1915 North Talbot avenue. Overland sedan. 830-647 (1930). found at Twentv-flrst street and Talbot avenue. Ford sedan. 735-538 (1930 >. found in front of 2039 North Talbot avenue'. Studebaker sedan. 752-308 (1930). found in front of 2100 North Talbot avenue. United cab. No. 45. “found at 1145 Nortfc Sheffield avenue.
