Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1931 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Fighter

Woman Owner of Burned Race Car Rebuilds It for Classic.

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Mrs. Anna De Bias© determination that sends men hurtling through space at more than one hundred miles an hour with death as their riding companion, and victory in the 500mile speedway race as their goal, today had gripped a woman in her first attempt to back a winner in the world’s speed classic. She is Mrs. Anna De Biase, who has stepped into the race game from the restaurant business and already has stricken the word “quit” from her vocabulary. She is so determined to see her car among that field of starters Saturday and so determined to give everything to have her car one of the foremost bidders for the crown of sp?ed, that today she is the driving power behind eight men. Those men are rebuilding with rapidity and mechanical precision her own race car—The De Biase Special. * SUNDAY afternoon, her car—“the prettiest car on the track"— brought forth the cheers of spectators a6 it started its warming up trip for qualification. But on the south turn, an oil or gas line gave w r ay and a few minutes later flames roared high as the car caught fire coming out of the Ijack stretch into the north turn. By Wednesday, though, it will be a far different story, Mrs. Deßiase says. Her car will be as trim and mechanically perfect as before, and it will be on the bricks to push its nose over the qualifying wire. “I’m not going to give up,” she said. “When I went in this game I expected something like this. But I went in with the intent of winning and nothing is going to stop me. I’m going to stick with it and fight the battle to the finish. * “My car is going to qualify Wednesday and when those racers roar away Saturday I’m going to do all I can to see that it’s right up there in the battle.” tt tt tt MRS. DE BIASE said the efforts of her friends to discourage her had not faxed her. It’s just like the restaurant business,” she continued. “When we started up, people told us it wouldn’t go. But it did. We fought all the way and that’s the way I feel about my car.” Mrs. De Biase said she had cried herself to sleep at nights after people tried to discourage her in her efforts to enter a car in this year’s race. In the stands Sunday Mrs. De Biase watched her car, driven by Floyd (Sparky) Sparks, take the turns on the brick oval. “It was the nicest and prettiest car on the track,” she said. “People sitting behind me said so. It’s a beautiful Job. When I saw those flames and knew it was my car it made me sick. But I was so thankful—ever so thankful—that the boys weren’t hurt. They had looked death in the face and were game. “After it was over I hauled the car to the downtown garage to have it fixed.” tt tt a MRS. DE BIASE has not named the driver who will put her car through its paces Wednesday, but indicated she had in mind a youth who grew up on the dirt tracks around Indiana. He is an Indianapolis boy, and she thinks he’ll be nominated as pilot of the car. Parts of the car have been removed to various garages. Wallace Mullen, Capitol garage superintendent, said the motor was not damaged and the other parts damaged by the flames would be repaired by late tonight. MEMORIAL TO TITANIC President Hoover Will Participate in Dedication Today. By United Press WASHINGTON, May 26.—President Herbert Hoover will participate late today in the dedication of a memorial on the bank of the Potomac to those who lost their lives in the Titanic disaster April 15, 1912. The statue was financed by popular subscription of prominent Washington women. ARMY AIR FLEET SAILS Armada Returns to New York in 10-Mile Line Up River. By United Press NEW YORK, May 26.—Sweeping down the Hudson river in an inspiring ten-mile line, the great air fleet of the army came back to New York this afternoon. The air armada flew in from Albany where the various units had gathered after spending the night at New England airports. Incoporaie Television Company Promotion of a television manufacturing project is planned by incorporators of the National Radio and Television Company, papers of which have been filed with Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr., by Frederick E. Schortemeier, Indianapolis attorney. Oxford Degree for Poet Yeats By United Press OXFORD, England. May 26. Oxford university conferred an honorary degree of doctor of literature upon the Irish poet. William Butler Yeats, today.

329 SENIORS TO BE GRADUATED AT jUTLER U. 76th Annual Commencement June 15 to Be Held on Fairview Campus. Approximately 329 seniors will Ije graduated from Butler university June 15, when the seventy-sixth annual commencement exercises are held on Fairview campus, according to the registrar. Degrees will be conferred by President Robert J. Aly. Teachers certificates will be granted to those who have completed the elementary course in the college of education, by Dean W. L. Richardson. Candidates for the bachelor of arts degree with their major sub-

jects are: Verna Ansorge, Helen T. Arnold, Theodosia Arnold. Gerald W. Ashley, J. Woodward Auble. Martha A. Barber, Margaret Barker, Ward M. Barrick. Paul Andrew Battles, Charles C. Bauermelster, Frederick M. Baumgartner, Reuben J. Beabout, Jacob Becm, Mary Louise Beem, Dorothy E. | Behmer, Louise A. Berndt, Audrey E. Bocher, Margaret Bradburn, Carl L. Brandt, Rosemary Bretzman, Irma Bright, Marjorie M. Brownlee, Marvin Burnworth. Dorothy L. Canary, Leland Clapp, Lillian Clark, James Connor, Catherine Cordon, Cecelia Costello, Lois Cowglll, Louise Cox, Irene Cravens, Howard Crise, Hazel M. Cunningham. Elizabeth Dalman, Betty Jeanne Davis, Elizabeth L. Davis, Clair Meadows Dean, Alice Dickey, Ruth T. Dobson, Albert Dunn. • Lucy Easterday, Arthur Echternacht, Helen M. Elser, Pauline Elvers, Edith Eytcheson. Frank Fairchild, Harold Farmer, • Wilhelmlna Feaster, Anna L. Fetrow, Miriam Forman, Katherine Josephine Frey. Winifred Galvin, Jack Garrison, Henry Gibson, Catherine Gilbert, Elsie Gllklson, Teresa Glofkllng, Constance Glover, Ben Leland Goldman, Pauline Gray,. Everett Green, Victor R. Griffin. John Hack, Claribel Hacker, Nancy Hall, Florece Hamill. Virginia Harbaugh, Helen Harding. Margaret Harrison, Bertha Hasseld, Volney Hampton, Nicholas Hatfield. Kathryn Haugh. Gladys E. Hawlckhorst, Emmett J. Hayth. Mary Anna Heaton. Harry Healey. Evelyn Henschen. Alice Hlgman. Alice Hill. Martha Hill. Helen Hitch. Elizabeth Hodges, Mary Hoover. Edna Howard. Elinor Howe. Anna Lee Howell. Arthur Huddleston. John Huessey. Frank lacobelli, Warren Isom, Berwyn Jones. Helma Kahn, Bertha Keller. Gretchen Kemp. Merlin King. Ruth Landers. Mary Isabelle Leedy. Elsie Leslie. George C. Lloyd, Mary Virginia Logan. William McClaflin. Elma Ruth McClurg, Earl McCormick. Martha Lee McCreary, Florence McDonald, Mary McNally, J. R. Lowell McPherson. Esther Martin, Helen Elizabeth Martin. Marcella Mathews, Catherine Mathews, Mary Ellzabeh Mills. Norma Helen Minkner. Mary Louise Minnlck. Ruby Elizabeth Mitchell. Ruell Moore. Mary Jane Morris. Catherine Murdock, Elizabeth Myers. Edwin Ogborne. Madonna O'Hair. Rodney Perkins, Jean Peterson, Urban Pflurn, Lillian Pierson, James Puett, Morris Pullln.

Dorothy Quick, Florence Rathert, Bessalee Reavis, Hilda Reeder, Dora Mae Rees, Florence Renn, Morton W. Renn, Helen Rhodes, Sallie Des Champs Riley. Esther Sacks. Marjorie Schafer, Clara Irene Schell. Frank Schmedel Jr., Marthalou Schoener, Margaret Schumacher, George Shelby, Alice Shirk, Wilhelmina Shirtz, Wendell Shullenberger, Lydia Simpson, Jessie Sims, Joan Sink, Omer Joseph Smith, Robert Snodgrass, Dorothy Stoelting, Cora Stoops, David Stutsman. Rosaline M. Taylor F. Louise Terry Gordon Thompson Mary Elizabeth Thumma, Gilbert Ulmer, Helen Updegraff. enevieve Verbarg. Truth Wakeman, Edward Ward. Alonzo Watford, Urban Wilde Jr., i Neta Williams, George Winkelmann, Adele Louise Woodruff. Lucile Palmer Wright. Mary Ellen Yarllng. Kathryn Yeaman. Nellie Catherine Young and Paul Young. Bechelor of Science Genevieve Clark. John Wesley Eastes, Cloyde Fisher. Richard Huggins, Edmund Huxley, Robert Shultz, Oran Stanley, Russell Townsend Jr„ Ralph Urban, Ray Urbain, Clarence Worth and Donald Youel, Business Administration Roger L. Anderson, Gordon Arbuckel, Paul Baker. Seward Baker. Charles G. Bolte, Robert E. Brown, Robert Butterworth. Owen palvert, Eugene Campbell, Cortland Carrington. George Cecil, Francis Conner, Wilbur Dawson, Howard Ely, Granville Geisert. Ralph Gery, Virgil Hebert. Leonard Herrington, Walter Johnston, Jack Klngsolver, Mayburn Landgraf. Hollis Leedy. Eugene McManamon Jr.. Robert Mahters. Muriel Maze. George Donald Meld. Lee Newland, George Nulf, Raymond Prlgger. Harrison Sibbltt, Harold Vehling. Robert Walden Jr.. Max White. Francis Crawford Yeazel, Sidney Zler. Education Freda Binninger. Etta H. Boling. Fred Brock, Alethea Byrd, Alice Bentley Clare, E. Ruth Goans. Mary Hall. Stella Hatch. Gertrude Hicks. Alma Hoss. William Johnson, Myrtle Lefeber, Martha Logsdon, Louise McCarthy. Margaret King McCarthy. Vivian Marbury. Grace Mathews, Teresa Meskill. Owen Mitchell, Martha Nuzum. Serena Osthemier, Mabel Overhiser, Mary Pasho. Grace Pitt, Helen Pritchett Powell. Ruth Quill, Edith Robinson. Louise Ross. Georgia Rost, Lila Shinn. Journalism Mira Auerbach, Betty Jane Barrett, Beatice Burgan. Elizabeth Carr. Marie Deßurger. Marguerite Doriet. Honor Gregory. Harlen Van Vector Hadley, Frank Heddon. Katherine Sue Kinnalrd. Ina R. Lawrence, Marifrances Lee. Maynard Lemen. Virginia Lett. Florence Morris, Evelyne Pier. Jane Riddell. Virginia Seeds. Robert Stearns. Harold Templeton, Joseph R. Thomas, Ralph Walton. Home Economics Phyllis Cofleld. Bernice DarnalL Virginia Hill. Mary Alice Jay. Madge McPherson, Helen Mers. Eileen Neff. Maxine Rigsbee, Helen June Sommer.’ Bachelor of Music Elizabeth Barnes, Mary Becker. Nina Margaret Collier. Wilma J. Friddle, Harriet Henderson. Audrey Kaassebaum. Margaret Elizabeth Kelley, Eva Nave. Raymond G. Oster, Leah. Clarice Overstreet. Adelaide Riley. Mabel Zetterberg. of fine arts; Ruth Darls, Gladys Mower. Ruth Muentzer. Elsie Caroline Nul. Flora Walter. Bachelor of Sacred Literature Mark Ashley. Frederick Daries. Charles Gunsolus. Eldred Johnston Jr.. Titus Lehmann. Shephard Marion. Richard Moore. Ernest Piepenbrock. Julian Stuart. Richard Williams. Berenice Wilson. Bachelor of Science in Education Madge Allen. Blanche Breedon. Marjorie Champe. Marjorie Forsyth. Allie Kantz. Pearl Llovd. William McCarthy. Celia Meskill. Mildred Orr. Addle Rockwell. Roseberg. Marie Sand idee. Jfines Strahl. Marjorie Woodruff. Marie Zook and Bertha Hoss. DANCE RESORTS TO OPEN “The Trees,” Outdoor Pavilion, to Be Ready Friday Night. “The Trees,” Indianapolis’ newest outdoor dancing pavilion, on Michigan road, one and one-half miles north of Kessler boulevard, is nearing completion and will be opened formally* Friday night, May 29. v “Tbe Trees” will be operated by Amusements. Inc., of which Lee H. Hottesis vice-president and general manager.

Trio Camps at Gates of Track to Beat Crowd

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Left to Right—Mrs. John Bennett, Mrs. Dale Redmeier and Mrs. Paul Copenhaver, waiting at the gates of the Indianapolis Speedway to be in the car that first enters the track grounds on race day.

City Women Find Vigil at Speedway Palls After Week of Fumes. This business of waiting to be the first automobile passengers in the Indianapolis speedway on race day isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. For despite plenty of canned goods to eat, cots to sleep on and books to read, three Hoosier women are finding that the gasoline fumes and oil odors from the highway pall after a week of waiting at the speedway gates. Holding the Fort The women holding the fort at the track’s entrance for themselves and their husbands are Mrs. John Bennett, 234 South State avenue; Mrs. Dale Redmeier, 739 Harrison street, and Mrs. Paul Copenhaver, 1915 East Maryland street. They have been waiting with their improvised tent flung over a car top since last Wednesday. “And it doesn’t seem as if another car will ever come to keep us company/' bemoaned the three women as they finished their breakfast today over a “monkeystove.” “Sure wish one would come, then we’d have someone to talk to,” said Mrs. Bennett. Husbands Commuters Out-of-state cars have won the “pole” to the Speedway’s entranceway in former years. Husbands of the trio commute evenings from their work to the roadside home. “Some of us sleep in the car and some on cots,” they said. Cards, funny papers, books and planning “pick-up” meals form the major pastime of the trio. A banjo and portable phonograph furnishes the dinner music. “It’s a great life if you don’t weaken,” they chorused as the fumes from another speeding car roared west on the highway.

DUEL SLAYING OF DOCTOR CONFESSED

Worn by Loss of Blood, Cousin Gives Self Up in New York. By United Press NEW YORK, May 26.—Howard Vincent Bridgetts, sought by police for three days? walked into a police station here today and admitted, police said, the slaying of Dr. Joseph T. Loughlin, a Brooklyn surgeon, in a pistol duel in the dunes of Marine park. Worn from the less of blood, due to a wound in the left arm, Bridgetts told police he was tired of hiding. He said he had spent the time between Saturday night, when Dr. Loughlin was slain and the time he surrendered, in attending movie shows and wandering the streets. He said he knew he was comparatively safe from detection as long as he avoided hospitals to get medical attention for the wound in his arm. Revolver Is Produced Bridgetts, 29, the son of a wealthy commission merchant, was accompanied to police headquarters by his attorney, George Leisure. Questioned by Lieutenant Peter Bree, Bridgetts readily admitted the shooting, police said, and claimed he shot the surgeon in self-defense. He placed a .32-caliber automatic pistol on the desk and said he had fired two shots from it. He also produced a black gladstone bag, which contained a suit soaked with blood and overcoat also spotted with blood. Loughlin’s body was found in a sand fill-in in Marine park, Brooklyn, early Sunday. He had been shot twice, once under the right arm and again through the right temple. This Indicated, police said, that he had his right hand raised as though to fire at an opponent in a duel. Angered by 'lnformer’ Two stakes had been placed in the ground, marking off approximately twenty paces. The surgeon’s body was found near one of the stakes. Mrs. Loughlin further bore out the duel theory when she told police that she and Dr. Loughlin had been estranged and that her husband blamed Bridgetts, a second cousin and at one time a close friend, of telling her of clandestine affairs the surgeon is alleged to have had with other women. PREDICTS SHORT HOURS American Trend Toward Less Working Time, Asserts Sociologist. Seven-hour day and a five-day week for all workers is the next evolutionary step in the American social system, it was predicted by Professor Charles R. Metzger, assistant director of the Indiana university of social research. Professor Metzger addressed the Indiana University Club at the Columbia Club. Ifc ndaj.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MASCOT’S BITE ‘ CAUSE OF SUIT Fraternity Defendant in SI,OOO Damage Case. By Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., May 26. Damages of SI,OOO are asked for Lawrence Brant, 10, in a suit filed here by his father, Lawrence Brant, against Beta Beta Association of Simga Nu, Inc., De Pauw university, as a result of wounds inflicted upon the boy when bitten by a dog, a mascot of the fraternity. The complaint alleges that the fraternity permitted the dog to run at large, although the animal was known to be of a ferocious nature. Asa result of injuries inflicted by the dog, it is alleged the boy’s face is permanently scarred; that he is in constant danger of suffering an attack of rabies and that he has a great fear of dogs. It is also alleged that as a result of shock, he has been greatly retarded in progress at school, FEDERAL AID URGED FOR BANKRUPT CITIES Senator Lewis Points to Chicago as One of 11 Towns in Straits. By United Press CHICAGO, May 26.—Government financial aid for cities verging on bankruptcy because of inadequate borrowing facilities was advocated today by Senator James Hamilton Lewis in an addresse before the Illinois State Bankers Association. , Lewis referred to the $300,000,000 indebtedness of Chicago and Cook county, where “payless paydays” have been frequent. He said there were eleven other cities in the state similarly embarrassed.

Gone,"but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: William Riggins, 979 Edgemont street, Essex coach, Irom Twenty-fifth street and Northwestern avenue. Samuel Fisher, 57 South Sixth street. Beech Grove. Buick touring, from 1000 Virginia avenue. Clifford S. Meir, 3768 North Emerson avenue, Marmon sedan, from 355 West Seventeenth street. . J h ® Re . v -3 & y D - West, 541 South Harding street, Cnevrolet touring, 741-395. from Senate avenue and Market street. M. J. Marley, 21 North State avenue, Nash sedan. 51-687, from Vermont and Cleveland streets.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: . H - R- Burdin, Franklin, DeSoto coach, found in front of 632 Ft. Wayne' avenue! Harry Richardson, 3310 Northwestern avenue, Essex coach, found at New Jersey and Market streets. * E. B. Hord, 1844 South Keystone avenue, Nash sedan, found at Hadley and- Patterson streets. Russell Rodgers. R. R. 7, Muncle, Chrysler roadster, found in alley in rear of 814 Edison street. F. A. Dunlop. 1025 North West street. Nash sedan, found In rear of 522 West Twelfth street. BUTLER CHAPLAIN QUITS The Rev. Thomas W. Grafton Resigns for Trip to West Coast. Resignation of the Rev. Thomas W. Grafton, as chaplain of Butler university and supply pastor of the Northwood Christian church, was announced today. Mr. Grafton has been a member of the board of trustees of the university and on the executive committee of the Indiana Christian Missionary Society for eighteen years. He is retiring from the ministry and plans to to go Los Angeles, where his son, the Rev. Warren Grafton, is pastor of the First Christian church. MINISTERS NAME HEAD The Rev. Ira C. Dawes Chosen as President of Association. The Indianapolis Ministerial Association today was headed by the Rev. Ira C. Dawes, First Friends church pastor, following election held at a dinner Monday night at the Y. W. C. A. Other officers are: The Rev. W. C. Hartinger, Broadway M. E. church, vice-president, and the Rev. J. A. Mears, First United Presbyterian church, secretary-treasurer. PEDESTRIAN IS INJURED Leg Fracture Sustained by Man; Motorist Is Arrested. Richard Sirp, 68, of 2615 Shelby street, suffered a broken leg Monday when struck by an automobile driven by Raymond Hamilton, 20, of 1439 Cruft street, at Shelby and Hoefgen streets. Hamilton was arrested.

BILL 6 PASSAGE ARGUED BEFORE 1 SUPREME COURT Fight to Quash Bus Law as Illegal Brings Conflict in Views. "No court has the power to go behind the signatures of legislative officers to question passage of an act.” “Courts do have such power and ! can protect the legislators themselves from the improper conduct of their own officers.” These varying viewpoints were among those advanced in the Indiana supreme court today. The case was an oral argument on petition of Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr., to have the high court issue a writ of prohibition which would dissolve a restraining order in the House Bill 6 case, and permit in 1931 acts to be issued. The issuance was enjoined by Judge Harry O. Chamberlin in Marion circuit court, where effort is being made to prevent House Bill 6 from becoming law. The bill puts complete jurisdiction over bus and truck lines in the hands of the public service commission. It is being fought on the ground that the enrolled act, as signed by Governor Harry G. Leslie, never had received final approval from the senate. Circuit Court Held Powerless Hugh Merrifield and Earl Stroup, deputy attorneys-general, argued the action for Mayr. They contended that the Marion circuit court is without jurisdiction, since publication of the acts is part of the legislative function which can not be interfered with by the courts under the constitutional division of power. Merrifield admitted, upon questioning from the bench, that under this interpretation the secretary of state is acting as a legislative and not executive officer. The writ was opposed by Edward Knight and James Deery, attorneys for the city of Indianapolis; George Koons for the city of Muncie, and Richard Ewbank, representing certain citizens, all of whom are fighting House Bill 6. Holds Passage Method Material Ewbank contended the courts have jurisdiction to go into the method of passage of a bill, if it can be proven that the measure failed to fullfil the constitutional requirements for passage. Koons contended that such jurisdiction is necessary to protect the legislators themselves. -Briefs are to be filed with the court before the matter is decided. Ewbank today also filed with the Marion circuit court an affidavit from Walter Myers, speaker of the house, setting out that he would never have signed the bill except that it was represented to have been duly passed and enrolled. The affidavit related Myers advised Knight, Indianapolis corporation counsel, to have a house member introduce a motion recalling the bill from the Governor when he (Myers) learned that it was not in proper form as passed. Would Write Emergency Clause Senator Alonzo H. Lindley (Rep. Fountain, Vermilion and Warren) expressed the opinion on visiting tho statehouse that legislators with important bill will protect themselves in the future’’ from such delays in printing of the acts by the use of the emergency clause. An emergency clause entitles a bill to become law upon signing by the Governor. Otherwise, the acts become statutes only when they have been printed and distributed by the secretary of state and a proclamation declaring them *in force has been issued by the Governor.

TURNED ON CHARITY Brooks Didn’t Like Conduct, Heir Testifies. Testimony that conduct of charity organizations caused Bartholomew D. Brooks to change his mind about leaving his estate to two Indianapolis organizations, was given today in probate court by Max J. Drach, 5210 Kenwood avenue, auditor in Brook’s ice business. Drach, who received SIO,OOO and some real estate by terms of a 1930 will of Brooks told the jury how he and Robert Hackney had handled Brook”s business' affairs for several years. Hackney received major portion of the $209,000 estate under the 1930 will which two charity groups, the Indianapolis Home for Aged Women and the Indianapolis chapter, American Red Cross, are claiming was obtained through fraud when Brooks was of unsound mind. The charity organizations were given approximately $200,000 under terms of a will dated 1922. DENY HELENE OUSTED Decree 'Expelling’ Princess From Rumania Royal Family Derided. By United Press BUCHAREST, Rumania, May 26. —Denial that a decree had been issued “expelling” Princes Helene, divorced wife of King Carol, from the royal family of Rumania, has been made in authoritative sources.

EXCURSION Sunday, May 31 Cincinnati $2.75 Greensburg 1.25 Shelbyville 75 Leave Indianapolis 7:45 a. m.; returning leave Cincinnati 6:30 p. m. or 10:05 p. m., same date. Tickets good in coaches only. Children half fare. Tickets at City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle and Union Station. BIG FOUR ROUTE

City Barbers' Union to Dedicate New Building

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The new building of the Barbers’ International Union at Twelfth and

Prominent Men Will Speak at Opening Rites for $115,000 Home. International headquarters of the ; Journeymen Barbers’ International j Union of America, Twelfth and Delaware streets, will be dedicated at at 2 p. m. Sunday with addresses by Senator James J. Davis of Pennsylvania and William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor. The new building of Indiana limestone, erected at a cost of $115,000, is two stories high and has a fifty foot frontage on Delaware street. James C. Shanessy, general president of the union, will be permanent chairman of the dedicatory exercises. W. C. Birthright, general secretary- treasurer, will introduce the speakers. Other speakers besides Senator Davis and Green are: Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Louis N. Bormstein. president of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. Boyd Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis Times: H. M'. Woodmansee, Springfield. 111., secretary-treasur-er of the International Labor Press: H. J: Halford, of Toronto. Canada, third vicepresident o the barbers' union: Louis E. Mcllvain. general secretary-treasurer of the Associated Master Barbers. The Rev. Ernest N. Evans, secretary of Indianapolis Church Federation, will give the invocation. Band music will precede and follow the dedication. Indianapolis residents are invited to attend the open house following the dedication. WARN STATE CLERK Deduction in Aged Helper’s Pay Draws Censure. J. Otto Lee, who under the Leslie administration has been serving clerk of the state printing board without reappointment, was censured mildly at a printing board meeting today. Lee had deducted the wagas of William Briddick, an aged assistant in his office, while the latter was on sick leave during the legislature. Total deduction was $24 and Lee was requiring it to be taken out of Briddick’s monthly wage in $4 installments. Today the board voted to cancel this arrganment and to restore the money deducted. Floyd E. Williamson, state auditor, w r as the only board member to attend the meeting in person. Governor Harry G. Leslie was represented by his secretary, L. O. Chasey, Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr., by his assistant; Robert Codd, and Miss Genevieve Brown, reporter of the supreme and appellate courts, by her assistant, B. F. Watson. Miss Brown is ill at her home at Winimac. I. C. GRADUATES HEAR STATE BOARD CHIEF

Recognition Services Given for Class Completing Normal Course. Graduates of the two-year normal course at Indiana Central college were addressed at recognition services Monday by J. William Bosse, director of statistics and educational reference of the state department of public instruction. President I. J. Good and Professor D. E. Weidler had charge of the service. The graduates are: Alta Berger. Boourbon: Aggie Burwell, Bourbon: Irene Carmon. Shelbyville: Elizabeth Cramer. Decatur: Alice Davis, Indianapolis: Hilda Dewsnap, Edgewood; Olive Jackson, Jamestown: Olive Jones. Whitestown: Maxone Keller. Rich Valley: Lucille Kennell. Royal Center; Lela Koffman, Ogilville: Jeanette Kurtz, Kokomo; Francis Lutes. Nashville: Nedra Moudy. Churubusco: Mary Frances Noblitte, Ogilville: Freda Phares. Shelbyville: Clarence Roberts. Lebanon; Margaret Samuelson. Donaldson: Rosa Scholl. Dixon. 111.; Olive Skelman. Peru: Irma Small. Wabash; Opal Smith. Acton: Mary White. Portland: Shelton Keiser. Orleans: Marion Hill Bauer. Brookville: Bethel Boone. Orleans: Edgar Miller. Corydon: Margaret Parr. Acton; Eva Smyser. Franklin: Esther Thomas, Ogilville: Marrith Waymire, Deedsville. and Alice Miller. New Albany. Elwood Man Killed ELWOOD, Ind., May 26.—William Short, 33, was killed here when the automobile in which he was riding plunged over a bridge into a creek.

Gould Not Close Hands or Do Any Work. Healed by Culicinra. "Eczema broke out in blisters on my bauds. It itched badly and when I scratched the blisters became larger. When I put my hands in water they burned, and I could not close them or do any work. At night when I went to bed the irritation used to keep me awake. The trouble lasted about six months. “I tried other remedies but they did not do any good. I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. After using it I purchased more and in a short time I was completely healed.” (Signed) Peter Schroder, Atkinson, Neb. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 2Sc. Sold everywhere. Sample each free. Address: “Cuticura Laboratories. Dept. H, Malden, Mae*."

CORNS ONEN E |NITE

Corns car sore toes can’t possibly hurt another minute after you apply Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. Relief is yours at once I Their protective feature removes the cause —shoe pressure —and the soothing medication they contain is quickly healing. Zino-pads are small, thin, dainty. Sold everywhere,3sc box. Dr Scholl's Zino-pads

Delaware streets.

TRY PANTAGES IN GIRL CASE Theater Magnate at Bar on Morals Charge. By United Press SAN DIEGO, Cal., May 26.—Alexander Pantages, multimillionaire showman, and three others faced trial today in Judge L. N. Turrentine’s court on morals charges involving minor giris. Interest centered about the threatened exposure by William Jobelmann, Pantages’ former press agent, of a Hollywood organization charged with supplying girls as party companions for wealthy business men. Jobelmann was one of the defendants. Shortly before the trial opened, Jobelmann announced he had discharged his attorneys, would plead his own case, and would relate "the whole story.” Jobelmann and Mrs. Olive Clark Day were accused of bringing Lydia Nitto, also known as Alice Blake, and Helen Livingston, both said to be 17, to San Francisco for a party at the exclusive El Cortez hotel last October. Guests at the party, it was charged, were Pantages, Jesse Shreve and John P. Mills, who pleaded guilty to two counts of contributing to the delinquency of minors. Shrgve, Pantages, Joblemann and Mrs. Day were accused of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and conspiracy to contribute to the delinquency of the Nitto girl. It is these charges which now are being tried. In the Air Weather conditions in the air at 9 a. m.: North northeast wind, 10 miles an hour; barometric pressure 30.15 at sea level; temperature, 62; ceiling unlimited; visibility 10 miles; field good. Arrivals and Departures Municipal airport—E. J. Kershaw, from Chicago and return, Stinson; Embry-Riddle passengers included A. D. Stuek and D. L. Carton, to Chicago, and E. C. McDonald, to Cincinnati; T. & W. A. passengers included Thomas T. Flynn and H. B. Robinson, eastbound, and Isadore Shank, westbound. Mars Hill airport (CurtissWright)—Ken Maynard, movie star, from Columbus, Ind., to St. Louis, Stinson; J. Irwin, St. Louis to Columbus, 0., Curtiss-Thrush. Hoosier airport—Nick Jankovich, from Gary and return, Travel Air; Joseph Stolke, Chicago to Louisville, Great Lakes plane. Tours Europe in Plane By United Press CAIRO, Egypt, May 26.—Miss Margery Durant, daughter of W. C. Durant, New York motor manufacturer, arrived here today, completing 3,900 miles of flying in her own Lockheed-Vega airplane, which she brought across the Atlantic by steamship. Ready for Ocean Hop By United Press LIBERTY, N. Y., May 26.—0tt0 Hillig, Liberty photographer, and his pilot, Captain Holger Hioriis, started today on the first lap of his proposed transatlantic flight to Europe. The first stop was the Teterboro testing field at Patrson, N. J.

Require Representative for the district of Indianapolis Prefer one who has had selling experience in a department store, furniture store or a real estate broker who has sold the better type home. Experience in handling salesmen preferred, but not essential. The product is the ultimate refinement for America’s finer homes. Retails at less than one hundred dollars. Write distributor, Box 1000, Dayton, 0., stating qualifications. Interviews will be given in Indianapolis.

_MAY 26, 1931

! MOST-DEPORTED MAN FIGHTS TO STAY IN U. S.— Emir Is Facing His Third ‘Kick’ Out of Nation in - Five Years. By United Press NEW YORK, May 26.—Mohammed A1 Raschid, self-styled emir of Kurdistan, a tailor and the most deported man in the nation, stood on the brink of the Atlantic today, and unless a fight beingwaged by the Civil Liberties Union helps him he soon will be outward bond again. If he is. it will be his third deportation in five years and, while the emir loves the orient, he also is fond of the United States, especially Detroit, where, he hints, he has important connections in the autoj mobile industry. The issue is whether the emir was born in Detroit, as he contends. or in Turkey, as the immigration authorities contend. Mohammed’s admirers recalled today, that when he was threatened with deportation in 1924, he offered to. commit suicide, thereby forcing Kurdistan to declare war oh America. Deported Twice Before In 1925, when he actually was de-> ported, he sent a letter to President Coolidge, demanding an indemnity or else the Kurdish fleet would be. thundering at the gates of New York. When he was deported again in 1930 he insisted he would return Eis Ambassador from Kurdistan, and, cause no end of embarrassment at the White House. Claiming lineal descendancy from; Haroun A1 Raschid, the emir con-i tends he is superior to man-made laws. He has debated that interestingpoint with the governments of the' United States, England, France and Germany, and lost every time. Unwelcome in Europe His European deportation record surpasses the mark he has set , in America. His European police rec-' ord shows jail sentences for fraud in London; for neglecting to pay hotel bills in Paris, and for "slipping out of a bar without setting one’s score—in Berlin. There also was the occasion when he posed as a Turkish general, but unfortunately wore a captain’s insignia; the time, also, when a French gendarme arrested him forwea’ing a fake Legion of Honor' ribbon. Between periods of inspecting mo-, tors and rallying the Kurdish forces, the emir presses trousers, he said. Makes his own uniforms, too. CHARGES FRAUD IN BANK TRANSACTION Doctor Asks 820,000 Damages From Receiver, President’s Widow. Charges that real estate certificates of the defunct Washington Bank and Trust Company were sold, him by fraud are made in a suit filed in superior court four Monday by Dr. Norman E. Jobes, 3426 North Meridian street. Jobes is demanding judgment of $20,000, and names as defendants in the suit Brandt C. Downey, receiver for the trust company, and Mrs. Isa. Hill Morris, widow of J. Edward Morris, president o the bank, who committed suicide follpwing the bank closure. It is alleged that on Feb. 1, 1930, the bank induced the plaintiff to purchase $15,000 worth of first mortgage real estate certificates by falsely representing them.

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