Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1931 — Page 2

PAGE 2

BOARD HANDLES GAS PROBLEM Executive Committee of Five Named for City. Solving of the problem of methods to be followed by the city in taking over the Citizens Gas Company today was in the hands of an executive committee of five, following action taken at a meeting of directors and trustees of the city utility district Wednesday afternoon. The committee, announced after the meeting by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, is composed of Henry L. Dithmer, chairman; George J. Marot, Guy A. Wainright. Edward A. Kahn and Thomas C. Howe, directors and trustees. Sullivan said the directors and trustees discussed the gas situation generally, but decided to leave study of steps to be taken in hands of the executive committee. With legal barriers to the city’s acquisition of the gas company removed by the United States supreme court’s refusal to review the federal court decision upholding the city’s claim, the committee will map plans for financing the acquisition. The committee probably will call a meeting with the gas company directors and trustees within a short time. Huge scales that lift, swing, and weigh metal ingots up to 10,000 pounds recently were exhibited and demonstrated at a metal congress on the Pacific coast.

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Arrange Last Rites for Edward J. Gausepohl

Services to Be Held on Saturday in Scottish Rite Cathedral. Funeral services for Edward J. Gausepohl, 66, trunk and leather goods merchant and manufacturer, who died of heart disease Wednesday afternoon at his home, 2363 Broadway, after two years’ illness, will be held at 'lO a. m. Saturday in Scottish ■ Rite Cathedral, under direction of the thirty-third degree Masons. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor oi the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, and Mystic Tie lodge No. 398, F. & A. M., will conduct services at Crown Hill cemetery. Masonry’s highest honor, the thirty-third degree, was conferred on him in 1930 at the imperial council meeting in Boston. Mr. Gausepohl was born here Aug. 4, 1864. His parents were J. Fred and Mary Gausepohl, who came to the United States from Germany. He was a member of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, various branches of Masonry, the Elks, Chamber of Commerce, Kiwanis Club, Optimist Club, Advertising Club, Hoosier Motor Club, Indianapolis Athletic Club and the Merchants Association. In 1891 he married Miss Minnie E. Fowler. Survivors are the widow; a son,

Lewis; a daughter, Mrs. Richard Madden; a brother, George Gausepohl of New Augusta; three sisters, Mrs. Harry Bade, Mrs. Caroline Vehling and Mrs. Meta Hausdorfer, and two grandchildren, Helen Marie and Richard Madden Jr., all of Indiana polls. France Feels Eartquake MARSEILLES, France, May 21. Violent earth tremors occurring at Intervals for forty-nine minutes were recorded by the seismograph here. Ortiz Rubio to Visit U. S. MEXICO CITY, May 21.—President Pascual Ortiz Rubio has agreed to attend the tri-state fair at Amarillo, Tex., in September if official business permits.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GANGSTER WILL BE GIVEN TERM O’Hara Pleads Guilty Before Federal Judge. Eddie O’Hara, reputed “gorilla” for the Joe Traum Terre Haute gang, will be sentenced on four liquor indictments in federal court Saturday morning. After several conferences with his attorney, George Miller of Terre Haute, the gangster came before Judge Robert C. Baltzell late Wednesday and pleaded guilty. O’Hara was committed immediately to the Marion county jail. His bond was set at $5,000. Ringleaders of the gang, Joe and Jake Traum and forty others were convicted of conspiracy in federal

court at Terre Haute last summer. O'Hara, it is said, originally was brought to Terre Haute as bodyguard for Joe Traum and then developed into the “gorilla,*’ whose ostensible duty was handling the machine gun and terrorizing the independent operators. He was arrested with five other hoodlums in East St. Louis, 111., two weeks ago. NAB ROBBERY SUSPECTS Three Men Are Held, Accused of Breaking Into Grocery Store. Three men were held on vagrancycharges today after police said witnesses had identified them as the trio seen looting a Standard grocery, 2621 West Michigan street, late Wednesday night. Those under arrest are Tony Faletio, 22, of 747 North Warman avenue; Louis Dugar, 23, of 723 North Warman avenue, and Frank Troth, 22, of 788 North Concord street.

AGED CAPITALIST DEAD Edward T. Bedford, 83, Expires at , His Connecticut Estate. By United Prett WESTPORT, Conn., May 21. Edward T. Bedford, 83, capitalist and financier, died today at his Green’s Farms estate. The aged philanthropist suc-

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cumbed to illness from which he had suffered three months. Bedford was president of the Corn Products Refining Company and director of numerous other enterprises. Much of his wealth was gained through connection with the Standard Oil Company of New York.

-MAY 21, 1931

CINCINNATI %2-m Round Trip SUNDAY MAY 24 BaaebitU Cincinnati-St. Louis Leave Icdi&napolU 6:00 A. M. Returning Leave Cincinnati, Centra! Vnton Station 10:00 P. M.. E. T.

THE INDIANA TRUST CO. PAYS Interest on Savings Jf£SS" a nd.... $2,000,000