Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1931 — Page 2

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RURAL TAX GUT 1$ ADVOCATED RY ROOSEVELT ‘Now Is Our Opportunity to Think Ahead/ Declares N. Y. Governor. By Scripps-TTotoard Newspaper Alliance CH ARLOTTES VILLE, Va., July 7. ■ —Simplification of local government and reduction of rural taxes was advocated by Governor Fianklin D. Roosevelt of New York in an address before the University of Virginia Institute of Public Affairs. Whether he sounded the keynote for a whole political campaign remains to be seen. He said he was talking government, not politics, and he kept strictly' to the course he set. But the simple and practical ideas he expressed about planning for immediate improvement in the lives of American citizens obviously fired the imagination of his listeners. “We used to call it preparedness when we were in the navy together, Franklin,” said Josephus Daniels in the discussion which followed Roosevelt’s speech. “We began it all, too, with our five-year plan for the navy in 1915. Perhaps that’s where the Russians got the idea.”

Discusses Program Roosevelt told the institute what he has done and is doing in his state to make it less likely that a few years from now that there will be more farms on which it is impossible to earn a living measuring up to American standards; of the way planning has organized the milk supply of New York so that dairymen no longer are ruining themselves and each other by furnishing an oversupply; of what intelligent thought and effort can do to bring industry to rural areas to the benefit of both. “Call it planning', or thinking ahead,” said Roosevelt. “We have an opportunity now to do, not a new thing, but a common sense thing. With all our vaunted civilization, we haven’t kept pace with this opportunity.” Planning Divided “How should government and Industry divide the work of planning?” Roosevelt was asked. “The first step is to find the facts,” he answered, “and the government should do that. The next step Is for the government, consulting with industry, to lay dowm an ideal plan and possibly to carry out part of it. Then it certainly devolves upon industry to go on, and I believe it would be glad to. But the two always should work together, for they are not things apart.” Roosevelt was asked if planning should not be centralized in Washington. Answering, he emphasized the value of experiment in fortyeight different laboratories so that a mistake in planning may not be fatal to a whole nation and that all states may have an opportunity to work out their individual problems. ROAD BODY DISCUSSES BLACKTOP SITUATION Attitude Toward Injunction Suit, However, Not Revealed. The state highway commission today discussed informally litigation pending against it in the fight over blacktop paving contracts. The attitude of the commissioners and John J. Brown, highway director, was not revealed as they moved from blacktop discussion to a consideration of routine matters. The commission is defendant in a suit attempting to halt paving of a road between Huntington and Columbia City with blacktop, for which bids were received without competition from concrete and brick interests. WIDOW SEEKS REVENGE Cries Out in Court Against Leniency to “Model Boy Killer.” CHICAGO, July 7.—The widow of policeman Edward Smith cried out in court today against any act of leniency for 15-year-old Varner Corry, the slayer of her husband, and prevented the “model boy” from pleading guilty to a charge of manslaughter. “He committed murder and let Jiim be tried for murder,” she said, glaring at Varner with a hate as intense as the day she pointed him out as that “model boy killer” at the coroner’s Inquest. SUES FOR HIS PROPERTY Negro Claims Landlady Confiscated Personal Possessions. A crooked cane and four union suits, safety razors and stomach pills found their way into municipal court records today when Walter J. McMurray, Negro, 437 North West street, filed a replevin suit against Mrs. Anna Smiley, 450 North Blackford street. He left these and many similar articles with her when he went to a war veterans’ hospital, McMurray said. On his return she held them, claiming a board bill. REVIVAL IS INDORSED City Baptist Churches to Back City Evangelistic Campaign. Federated Baptist chinches of the city unanimously indorsed the interdenominational evangelist!' campaign to be held here under the auspices of the Church Federation of Indianapolis in November and December, Monday night, at a meeting in the Thirty-first street Baptist church. Accident Fatal to Two By United Press CRAWFORDSVTLLE, Ind.. July 7. —Two Crawfordsville men were killed in an auto accident near here. They were Kenneth Garrigus, 23, and Guy Titus, 20. Will Trial Near Close By Time Special VINCENNES, Ind., July 7.—Trial of the Thomas Adams will case, which Mond y entered upon its .fourth week, is expected to be concluded Thursday or Friday.

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Here are the men who, taking part in the Paris conference for a suspension of reparations payments, have reached “ a complete basis for agreement between the United States and France.” Left to right are: M. Petri, French minister of

SUMNER'S HAND BROKENKAIN Doctors, Instead of Jaw of Opponent, to Blame. They’ve got bracelets on Sheriff Charles L. (Buck) Sumner of Marion county. But the bracelets aren’t the regulation kind of handcuffs at which Houdini scoffed. In fact the bracelets aren’t plural if courthouse visitors today saw the right, the mighty right, hand of the sheriff. The hand that landed on one Ira Holmes, attorney, is encased in wire splints with the index finger jailed in wire. “Just had it broken again,” said the sheriff laconically. “Nope, didn’t hit any one. It had a slight break (and he failed to add from his melee with Holmes) and the doctors in order to make it mend properly were forced to break It again,” Sheriff Sumner explained.

BAN NIGHT RACING ON WHITE RIVER

Complaint of Resident in Ravenswood Brings Sheriff’s Order. Insomnia now plagues White river region as far as Ravenswood, but residents of the riverside community north of Broad Ripple are not complaining that the heat at night is the cause. Chickens, house dogs, humans, all are awake when more fortunate Hoosiers are batting their forty or more winks nightly. No, it’s not the heat, wrote Ed Hunter, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce secretary, to Sheriff Charles (Buck) Sumner today. It’s racing motorboats. The clatter of the fast little craft skipping White river’s wavelets between Broad Ripple and Ravenswood is constant during daylight, Hunter explained, adding a personal description gained from his own residence on the river bank. After sunset, though, the roar is heard as the motors burn gasoline far into the night. “Most disturbing,” Hunter told the sheriff. The sheriff suggested coast guard stations or seaplanes to halt the annoyance, and then ordered his deputies to stop the moonlight racing. IT'S TIME TO QUIT Three Reasons Enough for Throwing Away ’Chute. By United Press KENOSHA, Wis., July 7.—Harold Hansen quit parachute jumping today for three reasons. They are: 1. On his first jump he landed in front of a bull with near disastrous results. 2. On the next jump he barely cleared trolley wires and landed in front of a train. Only inches separated him from death. 3. On the third (and last) jump, his parachute collapsed fifty feet from the ground and both his ankles were broken. Apartment Building Sold By Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., July 7.—A partly completed apartment building at Phillips and Walnut streets here has been sold to Robert L. Tudor of Chicago, by Otto P. Kern, Indianapolis, receiver, for $19,000. Shortage of funds caused work on the building to cease.

Daughter Wants to Wed! What's a Parent to Do CHICAGO. July 7.—The wealthy and socially prominent Fred W. RadcJffes announced today they have forgiven their 17-year-old daughter Grace for eloping and that if she comes home she wont be spanked. But Grace evidently was on a honeymoon witji her husband, Edward Jones, 20, whom she married Monday at Crown Point Ind.,’ and could not be reached. She visited home a few hours after the ceremony and left almost immediately, reportedly in haste when her father went to get a paddle. The announcement that all was forgiven came from Mrs. Radcliffe. “I had told Gracie that she could get married when she reached 18,” the mother said, “but she apparently didn't want to wait the one month rema ning until her birthday.” Grace and E Iward attempted to elope to Crown Point near Chicago, a year ag9, but police intervened before they reached there. The girl’s father attempted to have his present son-in-law sent to prison and later obtained an injunction restraining Edward from visiting, telephoning", or writing to Grace. v Mrs. Radcliffe allowed the romance to continue secretly, she said today, because flhe believed it the best way to keep the young couple happy and still unmarried. Grace had the same high school classmates for bridesmaids whom she intended having on the former occasion. • . *g

Negotiated Debt Accord

AND WHAT A MAN!

King of Robots Goes Creaking On

BY H. ALLEN SMITH United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 7.—A mechanical man, arms and legs creaking dismally as fhey swung back and forth, stalked through Times Square today, propelled by Charles Henry Buckley, the man with the electric shirt front, who has carried the title of “Count of Broadway” for thirty years. A crowd of avid men, women and children followed the creaking robot, watching his every moovement and observing the manner in which Buckley tinkered with unseen controls through a hole in the back of the coat. “Better put some oil on him, mister!” cried a newsboy. “He’s no machine,” voiced a skeptic. “He’s a guy.”

Professor Buckleey smiled and continued to jigger with the controls as his mechanical man goose-stepped across Forty-second street. There, on the sidewalk, it came to a squeaking halt. Professor Buckley felt inside the coat until he had found the right button and the robot swung to the left with all the precision of the wooden soldiers in the “Chauve Souris.”

He Was Mad By United Press CHICAGO, July 7.—. John Graff, 43, owner of a large apartment building, has confessed, police said today, that he attempted to bomb an elevated railway terminal because trains there made too much noise and drove the tenants from his building. “Nine of my tenants moved out because the trains made so much noise that they couldn't sleep nights,” Graff told police. “I complained by letter to the elevated company, but nothing was done about it. “I decided to bomb the terminal to call the matter a little more forcibly to their attention.” A black powder bomb exploded on the tracks, smashed train windows and alarmed the neighborhood. Two other unexploded bombs were found in the yards.

TALK REAPPORTIONMENT Results of Unconstitutionality Topic of Irvington Club. Constitutionality of the congressional reapportionment act and the question of what will occur if it is declared unconstitutional was discussed at the meeting of the Irvington Republican Club Monday night. Edward J. Hecker, James L. Kingsbury and Fred Dickerman led the discussion.

GRAND JURORS ARE NAMED BY BAKER

Depression Makes Job of Selecting Veniremen ‘Easy Task/ Andy “repression” and the “unemployment situation” makes the job of getting grand and petit juries in the Marion criminal court an easy job. A grand jury was obtained by Judge Frank P. Baker today after interviewing twenty taxpayers out of a panel of gfty. Unemployment and slack times

the interior; Prime Minister Pierre Laval; United States Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon; Walter Edge, United States ambassador to France, at Mellon’s immediate left; Aristide Briand, French foreign minister; Pierre Flandin, French minister of finance.

Down Forty-second street they journed, the crowd still in pursuit and growing larger all the time. The robot’s luminous eyes stared straight ahead. His gloved hands rose and fell. His shoes clackclacked on the sidewalk. Then to the right, directly into the lobby of the Republic theater where Billy Minsky, the man who brought burlesque back to Broadway, is featuring “Mile. La Pisch from Vichy.” Professor Buckley guided his mechanical doll into the privacy of an ante room and stood him up in the corner. 000 THE professor fished in his pockets and brought forth a cigaret which he handed to robot, Tiny Dunn. Tiny took it and sat down in a chair. “Hot, ain’t it? ” he suggested. “You take heat, it’s a funny thing. Now here it’s been raining and so hot I couldn’t hardly keep the perspiration back. Humidity, you might call it.” Tiny Dunn revealed that he has been a mechanical man for something like ten years and he never has met his beat. He never has caughed or sneezed during the long minutes of dead pan acting. His hinges, as he calls them, never have failed to squeak. And he figures that nine out of ten people who see him in action consider him definitely to be made out of wood and metal. 0 0 0 PROFESSOR BUCKLEY, famous for his illuminated shirt front, which has served to advertise everything from whisky and burlesque shows to pig’s knuckles and sauerkraut, spoke. “You might say,” he suggested with great dignity, “that this is the greatest advertising stunt I have ever seen. Billy Minsky got me to do it for him and the crowd comes right in to the show, drawn by ineffable curiosity as to this inscrutable man, so to speak.” The professor explained that Tiny keeps his dead pan for twenty-two-minute stretches, aided and abetted by a system of makeup which takes fifty-five minutes to apply. “Billy Minsky,” said the professor, “is so unalterably intrigued by this man that he already has started to teach him the rudiments of poker. Billy figures that if he can keep that dead pan with him in a poker game, he can mop up.”

made speed in obtaining the high jury possible. Grand jurors are: John P. Caldwell, 1153 Knox street, maintenance man; Harold H. Wells, Sio Fairfield avenue, insurance man; Harry E. Weier. 415 East Forty-third’ street, piano-tuner; Ralph Burge, R. R. g Box 494, farmer; Virgil r. De Long, Clermont, carpenter, and Lycurgas Carroll, R. r, n Box 29 C, employe of Indianapolis Power and Light Company. A panel of seventy-five men were called for service on the petit criminal court jury and ten veniremen were accepted before the panel was exhausted. Failure to report for sendee cut the panel down to approximately sixty veniremen interviewed by Judge Baker. The petit jurors selected for dut yare: Henry G. Blume. 3419 East Sixteenth street; Walter Cohen. Marwood; Jasper Booher, R, R, 13, Box 234; William Dobson, 1615 North New Jersey streetCharles W. Buennagel, R. r. io. Box 488Rufus J. Dearborn, 4100 Otterbein avenueGeorge Q. Cornelius. 2214 North New Jersey street; Clifford Christian, 5110 Park avenue; Ernest H. Cook, R. Rfl io Box 108 D. and Charles R. Bullman, R. r jn 318. ’ The two remaining jurors will be selected from absentees on the original panel and from an additional panel to be called. Excuses from service ranged from “sickness” to “my wife’s goine to have a baby.” BOWERS BURIAL IS~ SET Last Rites for U. S. Cort Bailiff to Be at Hagerstown. Last rites for Oliver P. Bowers federal court bailiff since 1904, wili be held at 10 Wednesday in the Dunkard church at Hagerstown Burial will be in the Dunkard cemetery there,. Mr. Bowers fell dead In a dime store Monday.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DRUNKEN DRIVER WAR ISSTARTED Mayr Orders Chief Garrott to Open Campaign. Grover Garrott, chief of state police, today was ordered to open a drive on drunken and reckless drivers by Frank Mayr Jr., secretary of state. The order came as the result of an injury to patrolman William De Mont while directing traffic near Michigan City Sunday. De Mont was struck by an alleged drunken driver, suffering a leg fracture. Mayr’s instructions were to be given both new and old state police at their district meetings today. In addition, beats of patrolmen in each district were to be assigned and a central reporting station selected for each district. Meetings were to be held as follows: First district, Tremont; second, Lagrange; fourth, Bluff ton; fifth, Connersville; sixth, Columbus; seventh, French Lick; eighth, Vincennes; ninth, Lafayette ,and tenth, Indianapolis. Meeting of the third district will be held in Peru Thursday. ASK FALL MANDATE U. S. Attorney to Sue for Jail Commitment. By United Press \ WASHINGTON, July 7 United States District Attorney Leo A. Rover said today government counsel would appear before Justice Bailey in District of Columbia supreme court at 10.15 a. m. Thursday to ask for a mandate committing Albert B. Fall to jail. Fall, former secretary of interior, was sentenced to a year in jail and a SIOO,OOO fine for accepting a bribe from E. L. Doheny, Los Ang :les oil operator, in connection with the lease of the Elk Hills naval oil reserve. FOREST FIRE RAGING 1,000 Fight 40-Mile ’"Blaze Near Martinez, CaL By United Press MARTINEZ, Cal., July 7.—A force of 1,000 fire fighters was stationed over an area of forty square miles today in an attempt to control a forest fire which has caused widespread damage on Mount Diablo. All available fire volunteers in the district were recruited to replace firefighters exhausted by a four-day battle against the flames. More i than 24,000 acres have been burned over, 200 head of cattle destroyed and a score of houses and ranch buildings/leveled. PLANS PACIFIC HOP World War Flier Will Take Off About Sept. 1, He Says. By United Press SAN DIEGO, Ca!., July 7.—Captain Herbert G. Partridge, former World war flier, plans a non-stop hop from Los Angeles to Tokio, Japan, about Sept. 1, it was learned here today. Partridge will be accompanied by a Japanese co-pilot, who also will act as navigator, his manager, Roy Hampton, said. Heat Causes Death By United HUNTINGTON. Ind., July 7. Samuel Stetzel. 78. fell dead of heat prostration while working in a factory here.

JAIL SUSPECTS AT PENDLETON, BAKJRJRGES Governor Leslie Asked to Confine Witt, Hamilton for ‘Safe Keeping/ Describing them as “desperate characters,” Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker today asked Governor Harry G. Leslie to place Louis E. Hamilton and Charles Vernon Witt, alleged slayers of Lafayette Jackson, in the state reformatory pending their murder trial in Lebanon this fall. According to authorities, efforts might be made to stage a break at the Boone county jail or gang vengeance might result in attempts to free the murder suspects. In his letter to Leslie, Baker said: “I feel that the defendants should be kept either in the Marion county jail or in the Indiana reformatory until their cases are tried, as there is more danger of escape from the Lebanon jail. I feel that great caution should be taken, as these men are desperate characters.” Sheriff Charles (Buck) Sumner said that Sheriff Wilbur Small of Boone county would agTee to the prisoners being kept in the Marion county jail. Sumner said they will remain he r e until he received executive orders for their removal. Trial, previously set for next Monday in county criminal court, was transferred to Boone county on change of venue petition of Ira M. Holmes, defense counsel. The men are alleged to have shot and mortally wounded Mr. Jackson, head of the Standard groceries, in his store at 419 East Washington street, May 27. Prosecutor Herbert Wilson today went to Lebanon to seek an early trial for the murder suspects.

John D. Is 92 By United Press TARRYTOWN, N. Y., July ’. —John D. Rockefeller Sr. will celebrate his 92d birthday here Wednesday. According to plans the celebration will be simple, with members of the family present. The aged financier plans, to play golf after breakfast, take a nap after lunch as usual, and spend the evening with the family. 7

103 and Going Up!

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“For a birthday celebration,” said Mrs. Mary Hartman, 103, “I think I'd like to go up in an airplane—one of these new windmill things.” So they hired an autogiro and took the Philadelphia centenarian for a joy-ride, and here you see her with her pilot, J. Miller. Mrs. Hartman had to get back to her housework, or she’d have liked to have flown to New York to see the giobe-circlers, Gatty and Post.

BACK FROM MARS!

Falling Rocket Draws ‘Kick’

FIRST possible trace of the huge rocket that was reported to have hurled an unidentified boy to Mars the Fourth of July was revealed today. In an exclusive story Saturday, The Times related the rumored disappearance from earth of the boy, and presented a picture of the lad clinging to the rocket as he tore through space. In an exclusive report to the safety board today, Judge Elmer Q. Lockyear of the state appellate court, 337 Buckingham place, complained of the dropping of a huge rocket in his yard the night of the Fourth.

According to his complaint, the rocket was more than a foot long and was attached to a six-foot stick. This is about the size of the rocket on which the boy was reported to have ridden tn a new world. City police, skeptical of the Mars report, are endeavoring to link the Lockyear complaint with the identified boy story in an effort to brand the whole dispatch from Mars as a hoax.

KILLING IS LAID TQ 24-YEAR-OLD FEUD

Pride Hurt Street Cleaners’ Wrath Is Stirred by City’s Disregard.

TT'VEN a street cleaner likes to take pride in his work. And he doesn’t like to see someone come along half an hour later and spoil his handiwork, according to W. H. Winship, city street commissioner. Accordingly, Winship has asked downtown business houses to have their sidewalks swept either late In the evening or early in the morning before the streets are swept.

Our street sweepers have to work the downtown streets early in the morning before traffic starts,” Winship said. “Then, after the stores open, someone comes along and spoils everything by sweeping a lot of trash off the sidewalk cn to the nice clean street.” . Winship said he had received a letter from W. E. Balch, Merchants Association manager, promising to seek co-operation from association members in enabling the street cleaners to feel their efforts are not entirely wasted.

PROBATION CHIEFS TOUR LOCAL COURT

Records of Frank P. Baker Studied by New York Judge, Officer.

The probation systec of the Marion county criminal court was being studied today of one of the oldest bars of justice in the nation —the courtof general sessions of New York City. Investigation of the system was being made by Judge Cornelius Collins of the New York sessions court and Frederick Levy, the court’s probation officer, to the courtroom of Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker. .. Judge Collins and Levy are touring principle cities of the nation probing probation departments and their activities on behalf of the National Probation Society and a committe of the general sessions court of New York City. Judge Collins is chairman of the sessions court committee. The committee is composed of three of the nine judges of the sessions court. In New York City the court of general sessions is similar to Marion county’s superior courts. It’s origin dates back to colonial days.

THE INDIANA TRUST CO. PAYS Interest on Savings 'ftSSSi “-....52,000,000

Acting on the complaint of Judge Lockyear, the board probably will direct preparation of an ordinance prohibiting use of large Fourth devices. Fire Chief Harry Voshell asked the board to include in the proposed ordinance a section prohibiting use of fireworks in some sections of the city, especially downtown.

Rich Game Warden Is Shot Down by Same Gun That Slew Brother. By United Press CHICAGO, July 7—A belief that Earl Eldredge and his wealthy brother, Charles, were victims of a feudist enemy who shot them down twenty-four years apart with the same gun and on the same island retreat, was strengthened today with the exploion of the only real clew authorities had found. Charles Eldredge, retired attorney, owner of a forty-eight-acre island near .Richmond, 111., a former state legislator and game warden for three northern Illinois counties, was found shot to death on his game preserve. Not far from the body was found a revolver with which Earl Eldredge was killed in 1907 and which Charles had carried ever since, in the hope that someday he might turn it upon the slayer of his brother. Two theories were advanced in the slaying of Charles. One was the same as that advanced in 1907 in the killing of his brother. It was that he surprised a poacher, disarmed him and was then attacked and lost his life in fierce struggle with the man he had arrested. The second theory was that the slaying of Earl Eldredge was the result of a feud and that the slayer knowing of Charles’ desire for vengeance, feared Charles had found his trail, ambushed and shot him after attacking him and securing the gun.

“There’s something back of it, something deep and mysterious and threatening,” declared Captain Hall Carr of the state police, who sent his men into the investigation because of the fact Eldredge was a former representative and a state employe at the time of his death.

During the stay of Judge Collins and Levy in the city they are being shown the operation of the county’s system by the Rev. L. A. Tripp, criminal court probation officer.

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.JULY 7, 1931

BUTLER BOARD MEETS TO NAME COLLEGE HEAD Dr. W. S. Athearn Urged as President Choice to Succeed Aley. Directors of Butler university met this afternoon to act on the recommended appointment of Dr. W. S. Athearn of Washington as president of the university. A committee named to select a successor to Dr. R. j. Aley, who became president emeritus on July 1, submitted to the directors its report urging that Dr. Athearn ba given the post. “Mindful of the great expectations in an educational way for the capital city of Indiana,” says the report, “and believing we have found the man with the necessary energy, ambition and capacity to fill the needs of the hour, we unanimously recommend the election of Mr. Athearn to the presidency.” The report is signed by William G. Irwin, chairman; Arthur V. Brown, Clarence L. Goodwin, Emsley W. Johnson and Hilton U. Brown. “As dean of Boston university school of religion and social service for eleven years, and prior to that as professor of pedagogy and education in several established institutions, Dr. Athearn demonstrated profession qualities of high degree and unusual executive ability,” the committee reported. It also was recommended that Dean J. W. Putnam be requested to serve as acting head of the institution until the president-elect takoa office. RUM CACHE IS FOUND By United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 7. Workmen unloading a shipment of lumber from Canada to a yard here found a strange cache in one carload—l,Boo bottle of beer and fortyeight bottles of gin. The federal prohibition office was notified.

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Our Luncheon and Dinner Special Today The globe has been circled in less than nine days, bat vre believe you would have to travel faster and farther to beat our Special today consisting of—NATIVE VEAL CUTLET, PAN GRAVY, with AU GRATIN POTATOES and PEAS for 21c Rolls and Butter grails with this order. GUARANTY CAFETERIA GUARANTY BUILDING Meridian at Circle Breakfast—Luncheon Dinner