Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 105, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1932 — Page 2

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DEDICATION AT MUNCIE HOLDS AVIATION STAGE Doolittle Among Noted Fliers to Attend 2-Day Airport Rites. By United Pres* MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. 10.—Muncie today held the center of interest for Indiana aviation enthusiasts. The new Muncie airport dedication today and Sunday was to attract fliers from all over the country with Major James H. Doolittle, champion speed pilot the guest of hopor. A 140-foot blimp from Akron, 0., soared over the field as activities of the two-day air circus got under way. More than fifty pilots are entered in the race events scheduled for this afternoon and Sunday. The contests include a race for OXS powered planes, pony express races, dead stick landing contests, formation flying by nine army planes. A patrol of ships will be kept constantly over the city. State police, National Guardsmen, and state police were in charge of the traffic at the airport. A dinner and dance honoring the visiting pilots was on this evening’s entertainment program. SMUGGLING IS REVERSED Mexico Now Ships Goods Across Border to United States. By Timm Special MONTEREY, Sept. 10.—Formerly it was customary to smuggle United States manufactures across the northern frontier of Mexico, because the goods were superior to Mexican products and duties were high. Now the situation has changed and Mexican manufactures are being smuggled into the United States, not alone because these products have greatly improved in quality but also due to the depreciation in Mexican money, now rated at about thre pesos to one American dollar. This situation is particularly true for Mexican shoes, and the customs agents of Piedras Negras, Nogales, Nuevo Laredo and Ciudad Juarez are constantly discovering contraband. TRY TO END PLANE JAR Effort Made to Eliminate Shock to Instruments. CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—Air lines have been experimenting with shock-proof instrument boards to eliminate the jarring and misalignment of instruments through hard landings. One of those expected to meet requirements consists of heavy rubber diaphagm ,and special rubber mountings. This rubber board is insulated from the frame by rubber shock absorbers.

Public Works for Relief Are Ordered by Hoover

Program Provided in Aid Act Will Be Started at Once. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—The long controversy as to whether the federal government should construct public works as part of its emergency relief program was ended today, with announcement by President Herbert Hoover that the building program provided in the relief act will be undertaken at once. This means that an additional $120,000,000 for road building, some $200,000,000 will be spent for construction of public buildings, army housing, river and harbor work, flood control, construction of Boulder dam, air navigation facilities, construction of lighthouse tenders, engineering work of the coast and geodetic survey and construction work of the navy department's bureau of yards and docks. Half of the $200,000,000 will be spent for public buildings. Most of the departments, which will direct these expenditures, expect to announce specific plans for building in different communities by Monday. Some delay in preparation of project lists has been caused by Comp-troller-General J. R. McCarl's ruling that 10 per cent must be deducted from all relief construction under the economy act. Immediate construction of these public works was optional with the President and treasury secretary. The act provides that the work should not be undertaken if amounts necessary were not available and could not be obtained upon reasonable terms. Hoover announced that funds are available, and that department heads have been directed to proceed with the work.

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Farm Strike Spreads; Ohioans Enlist

Two thousand northwestern Ohio farmers have joined the mid-west’s farm strike. Here is a section of the crowd at Bowling Green, 0., that voted to organize at once an Ohio branch of the National Farmers’ Holiday Association, after hearing Glenn B. Miller (inset), president of the lowa Farmers’ The Ohioans decided against picketing, electiong a board that will decide on measures of - withholding products from markets.

ORDER RADIO BEACONS Fliers Will Be Guided in W’est by New Chain. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10.—A chain of direction radio beacons is to be installed along the 1,206 miles of the Pacific coast air route from the Canadian to the Mexican border. The United States department of commerce has authorized installation of thirty additional radio beacons, and five of these are to be erected on the Pacific coast route.

STATE SENATOR IS CONVICTED Rollo N. Walter Faces 2 to 14-Year Term. By United Prms LAGRANGE, Ind., Sept. 10.—An appeal to the Indiana supreme court was planned today by State Senator Rollo N. Walter, sentenced to two to fourteen years’ imprisonment by Judge James L. Harmon here on conviction of bankers’ embezzlement charges. Walter, who also was fined $350, was sentenced after Judge Harmon overruled a motion for anew trial. After sentence was passed, Walter was released on $5,000 bond pending the supreme court appeal. Walter’s conviction resulted from an investigation of affairs of the Lagrange County Trust Company of which he was an official. Walter was a member of the 1931 legislature and also the recent special session, during which he was chairman of the banking committee.

Frats Slash

Indianapolis parents sending sons to Indiana university this year will not have such a high overhead to pay for those so-cially-minded students who will be members of a fraternity. Fraternity presidents, after a meeting with President William Lowe Bryan and Dr. E. C. Edmondson, dean of men, have agreed to reduce their social budgets in amounts varying from 15 to 50 per cent. Fraternity house bills also will be reduced.

‘EYE BRAIN’ AIDS BIRDS IN LONG MIGRATIONS Watch Surroundings and Profit by Experience in Flights. f? v V Science Service YORK, England, Sept. 10.—The mystery of how migrating birds find their way unerringly to their destination probably will be dispelled by further field observations, it was predicted by Prof. C. J. Patten of the University of Sheffield, in an address at the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science here. Repeated observations of the behavior of migrating birds have convinced Professor Patten that they are not guided by any “special sense.” by that they find their way by watching their surroundings and by profiting from experience. "Birds possess an ‘eye-brain,’ ” he said. "Their sense of vision is extraordinarily acute and by no means indiscriminating. It seems unr?asonable to brush aside the idea that migrants may obtain guidance by taking stock of landmarks. "Furthermore, the sense of hearing can play a part. The wash of the waves is a reminder to hug the coast —the guideline ,of primary importance. Courses of great rivers are followed by overland migrants.”

SUSPEND COPS ON DRY AGENTS STORY

Two police officers are under suspension, awaiting trial Sept. 13 by the safety board, as the result of charges filed secretly against them by Chief Mike Morrissey, on information given him by John Morrill, federal prohibition administrator for Indiana. The officers, Charles A. Schwinn and Julius Reinking, are charged with neglect of duty and misconduct, growing out of a visit to an alleged speakeasy in the 3100 block Madison avenue, a few yards outside the city limits^ Morrissey’s charges -were accompanied by a letter of memoranda submitted to Morrill by Harmon E. Crossley, dry agent, dated Aug. 30, although the alleged visit to the blind tiger occurred near midnight April 1 or early in the morning of April 2. Crossley, according to his memorandum to Morrill, was in the blind tiger making a whisky “buy” for dry raid evidence when a woman in the place grabbed his glass of whisky a moment after it was served to him.

Pledge Lists Announced by Indiana U. Fraternities

By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 10.— Following two days of fraternity rushing on the Indiana university campus, lists of pledges were announced here Friday by the majority of the fraternities. Additional pledging will be done before final lists are ready. The pledges at the present time are as follows: Kappa Delta Rho—Paul Balding, Morristown; Elmer Dalke, South Bend; Mayer Maloney, Aurora; Roland Sequin, South Bend. Alpha Tau Omega—Warren Munro. Geneva; Archbald McLundi, Michigan City; Robert Lumm, Auburn: Etlore Antonini. Clinton; Jack Butterworth, Evansville; Bin Donelli, Clinton. Delta Chi—Harry Alley, Muncie; Karl Threlkald, Bicknell; John Hurt, Monrovia; Elmer Denbo, Orleans; Lawrence Henderson, Holtonville; John Ruthie, Muncie; Clifford Dawson, Argos; Russeli Ralston, Paoli. Sigma Chi—Larry Wjlson. Indianapolis; Bud Barneman, Elkhart; David Craig, Evansville: George Baines, Elwood; Robert Harrell. Bloomington; George Lesh, Huntington; Robert Lybrook, Indianapolis; John Hair, Indianapolis; John Edwards, Danville. Phi Kappa Psi—John Tell, Brazil; Franklin Bassett. Albion, 111.: Robert Ost, Covington; Charles Rheinhardt, Princeton; Allen Bercaw. Paris, 111.; George Craycraft. Noblesville; James Meier. Huntington; Fred Wilson, Hammond; James Reeves, Anderson. Sigma Phi Epsilon—Donald Wilson. Ft. Wayne; Glenn Elder. Ft. Wavne; James Leas. Petersburg; Randell Willis. Petersburg; Bill Twyman. Bloomington. Phi Delta Theta-—Penny Bradfute. Bloomington; Fred Overman. Indianapolis; Tom Walsh. Chicago: Jimmie Hendricks. Indianapolis: William Fraser. Elwood; Sauires. Sandborn; John Heimlick, Connersville. Sigma Ku—Edgar Wells. Alexandria: Don Yoder. Goshen. Bill Long. Louisville. Kv.; Dick McGaw. Indianapolis. Beta Theta Pi—Robert Leffler, Bloom-

Cops Use 'Black Box’

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Meet the “bootleggers’ bane,” better known as the “blacs box,” which police booze raiders have been using to break down the resistance of suspects when they know there is hidden liquor on premises for which they have a search warrant. Negro suspects particularly are susceptible to the black magic of

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

A few minutes later, Crossley charged, the woman brought back the whisky, with the assertion that a police car had stopped in front and “she didn’t know if they (the police officers) were all right.” She added after she had recognized them, Crossley said, that “everything's O. K.—they’re good fellows.” The two officers, identified by him through their badge numbers, Crossley asserted, came into the resort, leaving their police radio car running in front, a practice against police regulations. Both officers,, according to Crossley, thought him merely a customer and assured him repeatedly that "Frank is all right and a good fellow.” They referred, he said, to Frank Paulino, operator of the place. Crossley said he bought the officers some cigars and, as he went out, simulated drunkenness by stumbling on the door sill. The officers played the role of Good Samaritans, he asserted, and helped him into his car, repeating that “Frank is a good fellow.”

ington; Robert Woodward. Covington. Kv.; William Brown. Bloomfield: Parke Thorne, Greensburg: Vernon Huffman. Newcastle: Wyatt Miers. Bloomington: Richard Hayden. Rushville: Arthur Thurston. Shelby - ville; Charles McCormick. Indianapolis; Ed Gill. Washington; Ralph Ehrman. Ft. Wayne. Lambda Chi Alpha—Allen Weir. Muncie: Francis Barr. Muncie; Geerge Milman, Hapimond; Woodrow Todd. Heltonville; John 'Wagner. Indianapolis: Robert Grant, South Bend: R.ov Loepke. Hammond. Delta Tau Delta —James Craig, Gary; Loren Jenner. Merengo; Tom Ludwig, Bloomington; Henry French. Bloomington; Byron Daubenhauer, Waukegan, 111.; John Handley. Terre Haute; Ted Gale, Bloomington; Fritz Purnell, Attica; Ray Wynn, Rochester. Delta Upsilon—John Carson, Indianapolis; Wendell Walker, Vincennes: Wade Dyer, Fairmount: Dorris Nash, Danville; John McDonald, Linton. Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Fred Cook. Bloomington; John Barnhill, Bloomington; Carl Knecht, Bloomington; Robert Cook, Anderson; Gordn Byers, Springville; Dick Schwartz. Kokomo; Louis Coyle. Warsaw; Damos Waterman. /Terre Haute; Arthur Yoder. Goshen; Harry Wernet, Muncie; John Brent, Huntingburg; John Ketcham, Lapel. Kappa Sigma—William Freeman, Indianapolis: Wallace Hauschild, La Porte; James Copeland, Rochester; Fred Hanna, Logansport; James O'Donnell, Logansport; Robert Ostermier, Indianapolis; William Miles, Winchester. TALKS ON JEWISH STATE Biro Bidjan. Jewish republic in the Russian Soviet union, will be the topic of Franklin S. Harris, president of Young university, Utah, when he speaks Monday night before a public meeting at Kirshbaum center, 2314 North Meridian street. He headed a commission which submitted a detailed report on Biro Bidjan, where 15,000 Jewish people already have settled.

the bpx which has a spinning arrow indicator and several lights. Left, to right are Sergeant Edwin Kruse and patrolmen William Marks and Kenneth Downs. TTie trio used is Wednesday night in a raid, and when Felix Crow. Negro. 1525 Cornell avenue, saw it, he broke down and produced five and a half quarts of alcohol.

MYSTERY CIRL, UNABLE TO GIVE NAME. IS HELD Young Woman, Apparently Well Educated, Mumbles . of Church College. Unable or unwilling to tell her name, a girl of mystery is held at city hospital today. After riding in a taxicab, which she entered at Washington and Illinois streets, Friday afternoon, the girl left it on White river boulevard near Oliver avenue with the remark, “There we are now.” Signaling the driver of an automobile in which three men were returning from work, the girl leaped on the running board as the car was halted, just as Lieutenant Ralph Dean and Sergeant John J. Haney drew alongside in a police car. The girl was taken into custody. Apparently well educated, the girl uses no slang, and speaks with an accent peculiar to some parts of Canada, according to Dean. She mumbles incoherently at times, mentioning “a Presbyterian college,’ ’and “a receiving hospitali n Detroit.” The girl, who is 20 to 22, wears a black dress trimmed in white, brown mesh hose and black suede pumps. TRIES SUICIDE; FINED Man Shoots Self After Quarrel and Is Arrested. ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., Sept. 10. —lt’s getting so a fellow can’t even shoot himslef, Santos Candelaria complains. Neighbors heard him quarreling with his mother. Shortly after they heard a shot. Police hurried to the scene, expecting to find the mother murdered. Instead, they found Santos with a self-inflicted bullet wound in his shoulder. He was taken to jail, charged with discharging firearms in the city, and fined $lO.

ACCOUNTANTS TO MEET HERE Attendance of 2,500 Seen for National Parley. Attendance of 2,500 is expected at the eleventh annual convention of the American Society of Certified Public Accountants, which will be held at the Claypool, Sept. 26 to 30, with the Indiana Association of Accountants as hosts. Officers of the state association are Earl E. Thomas, Evansville, president; Arthur R. Chapman, treasurer, and H. A. Roney, secretary, both of Indianapolis. Roney is national treasurer. Marshall G. Knox, Indianapolis, is general chairman of convention arranagements. Convention topics will include the economic situation as it relates to accounting and co-operation needed to reduce public expenidtures. In addition to Roney, national officers are: Henry J. Miller, New Orleans, president; Ralph W. E. Cole, Los Angeles, first vice-presi-dent; Patrick F. Crowley, Lynn, Mass., second vice-president, and D. W. Springer, Washington, secretary. Among those attending will be David Burnet, Washington, commissioner of internal revenue, and Arthur E. Carter, president of the New York state organization of accountants. Mrs. Marshall G. Knox is general chairman of a committee arranging for entertainment of wives of delegates. mexTcanTabor chief IS LOSING HIS POWER Federation President Put in Prison for Speech. By Times Special MEXICO CITY, Sept. 10.—The star of Louis N. Morones, ex-sec-retary of labor and eight years ago a powerful national figure in Mexican labor affairs, is definitely on the wane, if the trend of recent events is interpreted correctly. Still president o fthe C. R. O. M. • Mexican Federation of Labor), the "Gompers of Mexico” recently was arrested and detained in jail at Los Mochis, oi the Mexican west coast, after delivering an address, reperetd to have been directed against the army and federal government to workers of the sugar industry. Ever since his spit with Portes Gil, when the latter, upon assuming the Mexican presidency in 1928, threw Morones out of the cabinet family, the heavy jowleed labor leader has been working to re-es-tablish his high position in Mexican labor matter.

Times Readers* Week at Hoosier Airport Kessler Boulevard and Lafayette Road' Sept. 3 to 11 This coupon and 75 cents is good for one regular $1.50 passenger flight at Hoosier airport. This coupon will be accepted for one or more members of the same family. Passengers are taken in groups of two and four. Positively not good after date specified.

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Trap Ten', Loot Vault

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Holding ten persons captive for fourteen hours in two flats above a Chicago savings firm, a gang of robbers ripped away flooring, used acetylene torches to cut into safety deposit vaults and looted them of cash and valuables. The loot is estimated at a minimum of $250,000 and may reach nearly $1,000,000. Louis Kruse (center) was one of the residents menaced. , Others included five women and a baby.

FIGHTS HUGE BEAR; RANGER MAY DIE

By United Press WARROAD, Minn., Sept. 10.—Two forest rangers were injured seriously, one perhaps fatally, in an encounter with an enraged mother bear when they accidentally came between her and her cub near here Friday. The rangers were unarmed except for a small pocket knife and sought refuge in trees when the bear rushed them. Lloyd Hilborne was unable to scramble to safety

Thurston Calls for New Ideas in Times Contest

Prizes Offered for Tricks Devised by City’s Young Magicians. Thurston, the famous magician, appearing at the Indiana theater for a week, beginning today with his mystifying show of legerdemain and illusion, has asked Indianapolis boys and girls to help him find original ideas in magic. He is inviting amateur magicians, under 18 years old, to send him descriptions of their best tricks, in a contest which will give the winner a $lO cash prize and opportunity to exhibit his feat of magic on the stage as a part of Thurston’s big show. Thurston constantly seeks original ideas and has found that some of the cleverest and most mystifying tricks are originated by young amateur magicians. He wants to meet the budding magicians among the Indianapolis youth and has arranged a contest in co-operation with The Indianapolis Times and Carl Niessi, manager of the Indiana theater. Any boy or girl in Indianapolis interested in sleight-of-hand and tricks of illusion may compete. Written descriptions of simple, original tricks should be mailed to The Times Thurston contest manager. The celebrated magician personally will study each entry, and with a committee composed of A. W..C. Brumfield, the well-known Indianapolis authority on magic and magicians, and others, select the winners. In addition to the $lO first prize, and opportunity to participate in the Thurston show, a second prize of $5 will be awarded. Originators of the five next best tricks will receive $1 each, and two tickets to the Indiana will be awarded those who submit the ten next best tricks. Winners of the seventeen, prizes will be announced at Thurston’s second show. Thurston is considered the master of all magicians. For the last thirty years he has been performing feats of magic in theaters throughout the world.

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and the bear hauled him down and" bit and mauled him. Maurice Day, the other ranger, leaped from a limb rnd kicked the bear in the head. The animal turned on Day and knocked him down. Hilborne dragged himself to his feet, bleeding from wounds and threw himself on the animal. The bear again attacked Hilljorne. Other rangers came to the rescue and the bear fled. Hilborne will be paralyzed if he lives, physicians said, and Day probably will be in the hospital six months.

His appearance at the Indiana theater this week is the first time he has given performances at popular prices. Two baggage cars are needed to carry his elaborate apparatus. There are thirty assistants in his troupe. BAPTISTS TO BEGIN ANNUAL SESSION HERE 100-Year-Old Record Book to Be Used for Registration. Record book of the Cumberland Baptist church, which is celebrating its centennial this year, will be used Tuesday as a registration book for delegates attending the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Association, Baptist organization. The sesison will open Tuesday morning and continue through Wednesday in the Cumberland church. The record book is well preserved and minutes of meetings beginning in 1832 still can be read. Chorus of ninety men from the thirty Baptist churches in Marion county will appear on the program. Last rehearsal will be held Sunday afternoon in the Cumberland church. The Rev. R. H. Lindstrom of Southport is director. 20 Months to Deliver Letter By United Press PORTLAND, Me., Sept. 10.—A letter mailed from here Dec. 1, 1930, to Mrs. Alice Glazier in South Portland, five miles away, just has been received.

FRED NEWELL MORRIS Teacher of Singing Audition by Appointment 1722 N. Delaware Talbot 2595

. Butler University FALL SEMESTER Opens September 12-13 • Upper Classmen Register Monday • • Freshmen Register Tuesday • Instruction Begins Wednesday Tuition SIOO a Semester Cost for Indianapolis residents need not exceed $275 a year.

THE INDIANA TRUST COMPANY ISrplus $2,000,000.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CHECKING ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT TRUST DEPARTMENT REAL ESTATE, RENTALS AND INSURANCE THE OLDEST TtyJST COMPANY IN INDIANA

-SEPT. 10, 1932

137,000 PAID TO STATE FAIR IN LAST WEEK Annual Exposition Over; Rainy Opening Makes Big Cut in Attendance. The Indiana state fair went back to its home—the farm—Friday night and early today. As the fair gates closed at midnight, ttucks loaded swine, sheep, and cattle preparatory to long treks back to their barn homes. The paid admission attendance was 11,043 on Friday. A horse show in the Coliseum with the awarding of the Governor’s and. Mayor's stakes boomed the attendance. The week’s total attendance was estimated at 137.000 paid admission. Fair officials said the rainy Saturday opening the exposition cut attendance figures approximately 15.000 persons. Dick Winklepleck of Brazil, 18, was awarded a SIOO scholarship to Purdue university for his work at the state fair 4-H club camp. In the horse-pulling contest, Friday, for teams weighing under 3.000 pounds, the Carl FlatteV team of Greenville won first honors by pulling 2,850 pounds for twenty-seven feet and three inches. The Sullivan county farm bureau quartet won the finals in the male quartet division and the LaGrange mixed quartet were victors in their division. ANCIENT BLOCKS FOR PRINTING ARE FOUND Chinese Exhibits Are Brought t< Field Museum. B,y Science Service CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—The oldesi printing blocks in existence, brought from their homeland in China, have been adefed to the rare exhibits of an American museum. Acquisition of the historic relics by the Field Museum of Natural History here is announced by Dr. Berthold Laufer, curator of anthropology, who obtained them while on an expedition in China. The blocks are engraved with floral designs. They were made at some time earlier than the year 1108 A. D„ Dr. Laufer reports, and were found in the ancient city of Chu-lu in Chi-li province in eastern China. This city, submerged by flood centuries ago. has been excavated by archeologists. “The Chinese are the inventors of block printing, and, in fact, of all the essentials for printing-pa-per, writing-brush, ink and inkpallet or ink-stone,” said Dr. Laufer. "The Chinese invented and perfected these entirely from their own resources, unaided by any other nation.” MEXICANS RULE VOTING Hold Balance of Power in Texas; 683,681 of Them Are Citizens. By United Press AUSTIN, Tex., Sept. 10.—Former Mexicans, now citizens of Texas, and the descendants of Mexicans play an important part in the Texas elections. Along the international border and in San Antonio, they frequently hold the balance of power. Figures of the United States census bureau for 1930 placed the Meixcan population of Texas at 683,681 or 11.7 per cent. Percentages on participation in elections are not available. STINSON~TO GET HO NOR Memorial Will Be Erected for Pioneer Flier. By United Press DETROIT, Sept. 10.—A movement is under way to raise a fund with which to erect a memorial to Eddie A. Stinson, pioneer flier and plane manufacturer. William B. Mayo, formerly of the Ford Motor Company, is chairman of the fund committee. Stinson was killed -n. a plane crash last year.