Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1932 — Page 7

JULY 2?, 1932

SENATE VOTES FOR SPLIT OF HIGHWAY FUND Majority Is in Rebellion Against Veto Edict of Governor. (Continued from Page One) man.” Myers shouted. "That is against house rules.” Without completing his speech, Galloway retired to his seat. Walsman, member of the house ways and means committee, which reported the bills for passage, had declared the bill to be in line with the legislature's tax relief program. "The taxpayers of this county stand behind me en masse in this proposal.” he declared. The bills would reduce salaries of circuit, superior, probate and juvenile court Judges from SIO,OOO to SB,OOO and would cut pay of court reporters, bailiffs and pages. Galloway and Representative Jacob Weiss 'Dem i of Indianapolis, were sole champions of the fight to relegate the reduction bills to the waste ha?ket. A bill providing pi-oportionate salary reductions, ranging from 10 to 25 per cent, for public officials, was to be considered by the house this afternoon.

Cut for Treasurer The house passed the measure to cut the Marion county treasurer’s fee income to a straight salary of $7,500 annually with $5,000 bonus for delinquent collections. Leslie's message was described as "accurately interpreting the sentiment of the people of the state” in a bulletin issued today by the Indiana Association for Tax Justice, addressed to affiliated groups throughout the state. Because of Leslie’s admonition that passage of the $1.50 property tax limitation bib will be vetoed, the Governor was scored by Senator Lee J. Hartzell, Ft. Wayne, Republican floor leader, and president pro tern, of the senate in a rousing speech Wednesday afternoon. Hartzell and Bush were prime movers in getting the 51.50 tax limitation through the upper house. Leslie Called Ignorant Occasion for Hartzell to reply to the Governor's attack came upon debate on a companion bill, which would limit all budgets to twothirds of the 1928 figure. ”1 don’t care what the Govenor said, the $1.50 bill and this companion measure will be passed,” Hartzell predicted. "His threat of veto is not borne out by the facts. The Governor doesn’t know what he is talking about. The people are looking to us for tax reduction and we are going to give it to them, despite any veto threats. "I admit thess are harsh, severe, and drastic laws, but they are needed to save the taxpayers’ home. “What has Governor Leslie done to stop the spending of money? "He has not abolished a single board or commission. ‘Conditions have become so bad that the banks have to borrow federal funds to pay their high state taxes.” Hartzell then cited the expenditure of some $3,500,000 at Purdue university each year as "Leslie s pet” and another $3,500,000 at Indiana university.

DELAY DRIVER’S TRIAL ludge Cameron Continues Manslaughter Case to Sept. 7. Hearing of Richard Trippctt of Cincinnati, charged with manslaughter, as a result of the death of two persons in an automobile collision June 28, was continued today in the court of Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron to Sept. 7. Car driven by Trippett struck one in’ which Mrs. Mary Munger, 65, mother of seven children, and her son Paul, 26, were riding, causing fatal injury of both. Mrs. Mary A. Hendryx, 528 Berkley road, a daughter of Mrs. Munger, was the driver of the other car. She was injured slightly. FILM OFFICIAL ROBBED John Considinr, Wife Lose $6,500 in Gems Left in Car. By I nltrd Press HOLLYWOOD. July 28.—John Considine Jr., motion picture executive. and his wife, Carmen Panla ges, daughter of Alexander Pantages. theatrical magnate, were robbed of $6.5000 in jewels early today, they reported to Hollywood detectives. A grip containing the valuables was stolen from their automobile while it was parked in front of a Hollywood case, Considine told police. SWIM LESSONS FREE Swimming lessons will be given without charge by life guards at the Broad Ripple park pool during the week beginning Monday. The guards are official D*d Cross swimming instructors. Classes for juniors will be held in the afternoon and for older persons at night. Year Old Child Drowns By t iii Nil Press VALPARAISO, ind.. July 28. Phillip Hull, 1, of Hanna, drowned at the 4-H Club camp of Porter. Lake ahd Laporte counties, in Dunes state park Wednesday. A large wave carried the child under and engulfed three other persons, all of whom escaped.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belone to: John Bartley. 4632 Caroline street. Chevrolet sedan. 20-715. from Sixteenth and Main streeu, Speedway City.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recavered by oolice belone to: Edward McWilliams. 926 East Sixteenth street. Ford sedan found at Broadway and Forty-second street. Broad Ripple Lumber Company r * .i coach found at 4'5 East Tenth street Mue Oeorgc. 740 West New York street Whippet sedan, found at Market and Alabama streets Chester L. Heath. 1475 Roosevelt avenue Na-h r oedstat. found at North and Callfcn - - reels. Jo eoh Evans, 41 West New York street Chevrolet roaeh. found in rear of :3ii North Rurel -tree'. Browning Uent B<’rs. Tenth and Merld.Aii streets. Ford coach, found near Ktr.iun and Company.

Courthouse Lawn Is ‘ Home ’ to Evicted Family at Anderson

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Mr. and Mrs. William Barber and their son, Bobby, 2, at the table in their open air home on the Madison county courthouse lawn at Anderson following eviction from a house for failure to make purchase payments.

BROKER DIES IN 8-FLOOR JUMP Motive Lacking in Suicide of W. G. Chandler. (Continued from Page One) Dr. J. E. Wyttenbach, deputy coroner. For nearly an hour before his death, Mr. Chandler, according to statements to the deputy coroner, wandered about the seventh and eighth floors of the building. He placed his hat and coat on an eighth floor radiator. Several times he was said to have placed a foot on the sill of a window from which he finally plunged, landing five stories below on the roof of a portion of the building which is three stories high. According to statements from occupants of the Meyer-Kiser building, he clung to the window ledge a few seconds before the fatal drop. Life was not extinct when he first was reached, but he died before an ambulance arrived. His skull was fractured. Born in Madison, Ind., the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Chandler, he came to Indianapols after completing the public school course and for a time was affiliated with the original L. S. Ayres Sc Cos. department store. Later he entered the employ of W. A. Zumpfe, investment broker, 701 Odd Fellow building. He called at Zumpfe’s office shortly before his death. Besides the widow, to whom he was married seven years ago, three years after the death of his first wife, Mr. Chandler leaves a brother, Harry A. Chandler, 724 East Twen-ty-fourth street. Before removal to Chicago twe years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Chandler lived at 3726 North Meridian street. Funeral services will be held at 8 p. m. Friday at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Cremation will follow.

ACT ON STREET REPAIR City May Use Machine to Level Central Avenue Bumps. Negotiations for rental or purchase of a machine to cut off raised places on Central avenue, north of Thirty-eighth street, and on other sircets, ere being conducted today by the works beard. The board plans to lease the machinery for trial on Central avenue to determine operation costs and learn if results are permanent when the asphalt rolls are removed. Board members said the machine had been given a preliminary test on Central avenue, between Fortysecond and Forty-third streets, and on West Thirtieth street, east- of the river bridge, with highly satisfactory results. CITY ROCKED BY BOMB By United Press ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. July 28. —A terrific explosion, believed caused by a bomb, destroyed a gymnasium today, and set fire to the Lyric theater and several nearby buildings. The entire downtown section of the city was rocked.by the force of the explosion. Windows were shattered for blocks. Several machines in front of the gymnasium were wrecked. No one was reported injured or killed.

Deadline Time Extended in ‘Tom Brown 1 Contest

Closing Hour Is Placed a' Midnight Friday for Youngsters. With many photographs of Indianapolis boys 'between 12 and 17 reaching the office of the ' Tom Brdfcn" editor of The Indianapolis Times, judges announce that the closing time for the contest will be extended from midnight tonight until midnight Friday. This extension will allow many local boys who wished to enter the contest, but who waited until the last moment, time to prepare their photographs and send them in. This contest is being sponsored by The Times in conjunction with the world's premier showing of • Tom Brown of Culver.” a Universal picture starring Tom Brown, at the Apollo theater. Any boy between 12 and 17 who ieels that he bears resemblance to any one of the young motion picture stars pvbl’shed in The Times should ru-’i i 1 h s photograph. First prize will be a two weeks 1 vacation at Culver military aca-

Man, Wife and 2-Year-Old Son Will Stay Until ‘Something Happens.’ fly Times Syr fit! l ANDERSON, Ind., July 28.—Since Monday, William Barber, his wife and their son Bobby, 2, surrounded by furniture, have been living on the lawn of the Madison county courthouse here, following eviction from a house for failure to make payments toward its purchase. Officials and social welfare workers brand Barber a “red,” stating that he has been offered work and a home, but has refused both. Friends of the couple, said to be Communists, aided them in moving furniture to the lawn. The open air home is furnished with two beds, chairs, a sideboard table, two stoves and a radio. Hundreds of persons gather daily to watch the housekeeping routine which has included a bath for Bobby and the family washing, hung on a line stretched from a cannon to a tree. Barber announces that he and his family will remain until "something happens.” Sheriff Bernard Bradley says he will make no move until county commissioners issue an order. Besides Bobby, the Barbers have two other sons. One is confined to a sanitarium and the other is with his grandfather as Salem, Ind. Authorities assert Barber has made radical speeches and took part in the recent state hunger march at Indianapolis. He blames his radical activities for his present situation. He lost his job in an Anderson factory in April.

‘COIN - HARVEY COMING TO CONVENTION HERE Liberty Party President Candidate to Arrive Saturday. William “Coin” Harvey, presij dentiak candidate of the Liberty i party, will arrive in Indianapolis by plane from St. Louis at 10:30 Saturday, according to announcement today by Ward B. Hiner, Liberty i candidate for Governor. Leaving St. Louis at 7. the plane ; will land at the Hoosier airport. 1 where Harvey will b? greeted by Hiner and other party leaders on hand to attend the state convention of the Liberty party, which opens Monday at Germania park. Harvey will speak in Frankfort, Ind., at 8 Saturday evening, re- | turning to Indianapolis to attend a reception in his honor Sunday between 4 and 6 at Hiner’s home, 5351 Washington boulevard. His first address to the convention will be at 2 Monday. SHORTEN WORKING DAYS California Hopes to End Unemployment With New System. Ili/ United I 1 ress L?S ANGELES. Cal., July 28.—A plan io end unemployment throughout California by staggering hours and shortening work days was per- ! fected today. Los Angeles organized a committee of seven business men and financiers to make the plan operative in southern California industry, co-operating with a similar move launched in San Francisco Tuesday and in conjunction with other comI mittees throughout the state.

demy, with all expenses paid. Five other beys who are winners will be | given the opportunity to enjoy a week-end at this famous woodcraft instftution for boys. Final judging of all ohotographs submitted will be made as soon as possible after the contest closes, to afford the winners opportunity to enjoy a splendid vacation, with all | exppenses paid, at a summer camp that should be the paradise of every young boy’s dream.

Hardaway Y. Browning Tells How Guticura Healed Eczema. “Eczema broke out on me in pimples and itched and burned very badly. It was on my face and head and then spread to my limbs. The irritation was awful, and my clothing made it worse. I tried different -emedies that stopped it for a while, but it would come back again as bad as ever. “I had the eczema for about four months before I commenced using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in about three months I was completely healed.” (Signed) Hardaway Y. Browning, 2127 N. Campbell Ave., Springfield, Mo, Feb. 27, 1932. rtftinirH Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c. Talcum 25c. Ki Proprietors: Potter Drug * Chemical Corp, Malden, Mam.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CUSTOMS FEES 6AIN $85,000 Increase for Indianapolis Is Revealed by Foland. Increase of $85,000 in customs collections in the year ending June 30, was reported today by George M. Foland, customs cellector for the port of Indianapolis. Total collections for the year were $5b7,497, of which $138,903 was collected in the Indianapolis office and $168,594 at the Evansville subport. Warehouse withdrawals by cigar factories accounted for most of the Evansville receipts. Receipts at the Evansville sub-port in the previous year were only $17,052, because cigar factories in the 1929-1930 fiscal year had withdrawn large quantities of tobacco from bonded warehouses that year to avoid increased customs fees under the HawleySmoot tariff act. Evansville receipts that year were $522,609, Foland said. % Collections at the Indianapolis office last year showed a decrease of $64,000, due largely to economic conditions and the present high tariff, Foland explained. GUARDSMEN TO CAMP Fourteen Special Trains to Take Indiana Troops to Camp Knox. Annual two weeks’ field encampment of the Indiana national guard will open Sunday, Aug. 7, at Camp Knox, Ky. Fourteen special trains will be employed to transport the 4,936 Hcosier guardsmen and 185 animals to the encampment. Estimated expense of the camp has been set at $245,334.83. FEDERATION TO MEET Civic Clubs Council to Hold Session at Garfield Park. Business meeting of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs will be held at 7 Friday night in the open-air theater at Garfield park, preceding a concert by the Indianapolis Civic orchestra. Amelia Safe in Forced Landing LOS ANGELES, July 28.—Safe after a forced landing en route from Salt Lake City which delayed her arrival, Amelia Earhart Putnam, trans-Atlantic aviatrix, was to fly in a navy airplane today to San Diego for participation in an aeriel review.

Furniture—Rugs Draperies Sander & Recker Furniture Cos. MERIDIAN AT MARYLAND

IScWfP rOUTLET stores ■ seuaßle Shoes at luwes t trices

MUST WOMEN f^SUFFER? M TS it their lot to M, B A suffer cramps and M backaches every 9 month? Certainly -• W not. The tonic effect of Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Veges table Compound has ended all that for many thousands of women. Mrs. Schnepper’s case is typical. She was always sickly. Tired. Gloomy. “Now,” she says, "everywhere I go people tell me how much better I look. 1 feel like dancing for joy all the time.”

160,000 CHEER HITLER AS HE INVADESBERLIN Roars for ‘United Germany’ in Campaign Speech Is Kaiser’s Bow. BY FREDERICK KUH United Press Staff Correspondent BERLIN, July 28.—Adolf Hitler, dapper new citizen of Germany, in a dramatic plea for a united Germany, shouted from the Kaiser’s old box at Gruenewald stadium, brought the Nazi election campaign to Berlin while bands played, torches flared, and storm troops paraded in a drizzling rain. Hitler spoke Wednesday night to a wildly enthusiastic crowd of 160,000 persons, urging them to drive warring parties from Germany “forever.” There were 70,000 in the immense stadium grand stands, an equal number at the adjacent race track, and 20,000 brown shirt storm troops mingled with the Nazi “white shirt” recruits. Loud speakers carried Hitler's message to all in the great crowd. Hitler’s arrival was staged to arouse enthusiasm. He flew to Berlin. Before landing his plane circled low over the stadium. Hitler leaned over the side of the ma-

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Murders Aunt; Plot to Use Girl as Alibi Bared

Bushels of Pain By United Brest COUNCIL GROVE. Kan.. July 28.—1 t cost A. F. Brownell, farmer, six and two-thirds bushels of wheat to have a tooth pulled. It was worth the price, he declared.

chine and waved his handkerchief to the crowd. It roared “Hail, Hitler!” After his speech, Hitler circled the stadium slowly in a big motor car, his arm raised in the Nazi salute. The storm troops and the crowd cheered for fifteen minutes. Hitler blamed former administrations for the miseries of the fatherland and said they had made Germany “the laughing stock of the world for the thirteen past years.” Hitler s dramatic appearance in the final stage of the election campaign eclipsed a sensational declaration by Otto Braun, ousted Prussian premier, that civil war was avoided last week when the Von Papen cabinet seized control of Russia “only by the cool-headedness and exemplary discipline of the Republican parties.” Braun made his statement in an open letter to Chancellor Von Papen, asserting the ousted Purssian government rightfully remained in power despite the refusal of the supreme court to grant an injunction in the Prussians' favor.

Pretty Blond Sweetheart Bears Out Youthful Slayer’s Story. i By United Press SAN JOSE, Cal., July 28.—A pretty blond girl, who admitted she was in love with him, today substantiated the confession of George D. Templeton Jr., 20, University of California student, that he killed his aunt and critically wounded his uncle. Miss Clare Burnette, 28. told Sheriff William Emig the youth had planned to tpll officers that he was at her apartment in Oakland the night his aunt, Mrs. Lilliaan Babcock, Manila society woman, was slashed to death with a butcher knife. Asew r hours after Mrs. Babcock was slain fcnd her husband, W. Rider Babcock, wealthy Manila importer, stabbed in the Los Altos home where they were visiting, the girl said Templeton visited her and declared: “You are to be my alibi. I’ve told every one I was in your apartment Tuesday night while I was in Los Altos. You've got to stand by me.” Before the scholarly "model student” could test the love of his attractive friend, however, he calmly had confessed to Sheriff Emig that he staged the brtual crime in the hope of his mother, who is Babcock's sister, might collect his victims’ insurance.

PAGE 7

CHARGE HOOVER OLYMPIC ‘SNUB’ INSULTS WORLD Foreign Athletes Resent His Failure to Attend Coast Games. By United Press LOS ANGELES. July 28 —The Los Angeles Illustrated Daily News today quoted foreign athletes attending the Olympic games as saying that failure of President Hoover to open the games "seemed like a breach of international etiquette.” The News' story said: “ ‘Wnat is the matter with your President?’ " Too many have asked. •Is it a war? Is it that your congress is in session? “ ’Why can not he open the games, like our rulers have done in the past? Why must he send his—what you call him—the Vice-Presi-dent?’ " “Thus far their attitude has more of puzzlement than indignation. “They insist the Olympic games, coming once every four years, is the greatest instrument in the promotion of international understanding. “ ‘But these United States.’ a member of a powerful foreign delegation shook his head—’it does not seem right. W’e read jokes about Vice-President, about how you lose them. They are fine men, sure—'