Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1932 Edition 02 — Page 2

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CANADA BOASTS OF GREAT GAIN BT WATERWAY U. S. Has Less to Win and More to Lose, Asserts Montreal Star. This l* the fourth nf * **rie on r*>*ilbUltie* of the At. Lawrence waterway. BY WALKER STONE Time. Staff Writer WASHINGTON. Sept. 17. Canada has more? to train and lass to loss than has the United States by completion of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence waterway project, according to an analysis by the Montreal Star of the treaty recently signed by representatives of the two governments. In that connection, it is well known here that Canadian repref^ntalives were highly pleased with the political tilt between Governor Frank D. Roosevelt and President Hoover which brought a showdown in the St. Lawrence negotitions. and is believed to have caused the United States to make concessions which might not have been made except, in haste. Only $38,000,000 yet will have to be expendrd by the Dominion government, according to the Montreal Star’s computations, as contrasted to the $258 000,000 of new funds which will be called for from our federal government. More to Be Paid In addition to the Dominion's share, however, must be added $67.000 000 to be paid out by the province of Ontario for power development on the Canadian side of the international boundary. Nor does the Star's figure include the $82,000,000 whirh will have to be spent developing the lower reaches of the stream flowing entirely within confines of the province of Quebec. The lump outlay of $258,000,000 by our federal government is not split up to show how much of the cost will be borne by New York state, when and if it obtains a franchise for power development. Favorable division of casts, favorable division of power, and favorable restriction of the amount of water which Chicago might divert from Lake Michigan are stressed in the Star's analysis of the treaty, prepared by an engineering expert. Boasts of Benefits Concerning rost division and the benefits calculated to flow to Canada, the Star article boasts: “The river works in the international section df the St. Lawrence river will be constructed . .'.out of funds provided by the United States. The part of these works located on the Canadian side of the international boundary will be constructed by Canadian engineers. Canadian labor, and with Canadian material. “In the international section, Canada will construct Independently of the United States the navigation works at Cr.vslpr island, together with all rehabilitation works on the Canadian side . . . ‘Canada will construct the works in the national sectiop of the St. Lawrence . . . wholly 1 independent of United States co-operation or supervision. (These costs are estimated at $82,954,000.) The so-called “credits’’ granted the Dominion in the division of costs are largely responsible for the apparent Inequality. For example, “credit’’ was given Canad" for the $128,000,000 which it expended on the new Welland ship canal, connecting Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. Canal Called Link Canada contended that the Welland was a link in the projected deep waterway, although the primary purpose of its construction was to enable large lake cargo boats to pass from the lower lakes through Lake Ontario *o the head of the St. Lawrence for transshipment of cargo by the Canadian 'barge canal down the St. Lawrence to Montreal. The net result has been diversion of much traffic which before flowed through Buffalo. t Concerning power division, (he Star article says: "In conjunction with the St. Lawrence waterway, there ultimately will be developed some 5,000,000horse power of low-priced electrical energy, of which some 4.000.000horse power is the property of Canada. Sees Great Future “This immense block of low-priccd fiower, on one hand directly connected with the markets of the wcrld through economic ocean navigation: and on the other hand directly connected with the immense resources of mine, forest and land of the Dominion through the 1,000mile deep water navigation of the inland seas: and located astride the St. Lawrence and the tributary commerce, outgoing and ingoing, of a population of 50,000. offers an opportunity for industrial and com-; mercial development which can not be equaled elsewhere. “The St. Lawrence valley is destined to become one of the great industrial centers of the world.’’ JESSE RAY IS ELECTED 'Firemen’s Post. American Legion, to i Install Oflfires Sept. 28. Jesse B. Ray will be installed commander of Firemen's post No. 1 24 American Legion, at a meeting Sept. 28 at 2 at the Washington, j Other officers to be installed are: i Myron Sr*r, vice-commander; Nicholas 1 Werner, second vice-commander: Oarrett j Cruma. adjutant: John Lanahan, service oni r a. Rev Washburn, executive committaaman: Herbert Dwyer, finance officer: Nitra Trulock. child welfare head; Fred , DUcer. chairman executive, committee Benjamin Howard, membership head, and I Henry Srhretber. publicity officer. RUSHVILLE MAYOR WINS Elected President of Municipal League at Gary Conference. By (>: itf't f’ •. GARY. .v* 4 went —Mayor Samuel Trabue, *Vunville, took over the reigns of the Indiana Municipal League from the retiring president. Mayor R. O. Johnson. Gary, following his election Friday night at the closing session of the league's thirtysecond annual convention. Next year’s convention was sent to Bedford after a spirited battle on the convention floor with the Ft Wayne delegation.

Quizzed in Death Case

Miss Grace Atwood t pictured here), art student and daughter of a wealthy % Middleboro 'Mass.) manufacturer, was said by authorities to have been a frequent companion of Charles Edward Du Bois, Westchester county <N. Y.) jeweler, whac wife mysteriously disappeared on Aug. 10. Du Bois killed himself Friday, just before the wife's body was found.

CHURCHMEN TO HOLD PARLEYS Nine Meetings to Be Held Here Sept. 26. Nine meetings of conference and prayer in and near Indianapolis will be held Sept. 26 for the spiritual advance of churches for the coming year. The first meeting will be the annual fall retreat of ministers of the city at the Boy Scout reservation, Dr. Ernest N. Evans, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Church Federation, announced. A luncheon for presidents of women’s organizations will be held in the morning at the Emerson Avenue Baptist church. Young people of city churches will meet at 7:30 p. m. In the Central Chritsian church. Six community services will be held at the following churches at night: Second Presbyterian, Northwood Christian, St. Paul Methodist church. Westminster Presbyterian, Irvington Presbyterian and the Edwin Ray Methodist church.

The City in Brief

Two World war veterans will discuss the forced evacuation of Washington by the bonus army at 7:30 tonight at the Washington street side of the courthouse. Speakers will be L. J. Hart and Vic Miller. It is planned to form a local organization of the bonus expeditionary force following the meeting. Pupils of the 6A-7B class at Austin H. Brown school, No. 6, at 702 Union street, Friday presented a Constitution day program as their first activity of the school year. The pupils, under direction of Miss Isabella Drohan, teacher, gave the program in each of the school’s classrooms. Fall meeting of the Indianapolis presbytery of the Presbyterian church will be held Monday and Tuesday at Clay City, with the Rev. Thomas N. Hunt, 1318 Pleasant street, moderator, presiding. Dr. Tolbert F. Reavis, head of the Butler university sociology department, will speak in Sapnish to the Club Espanol de Indianapolis at 8 Wednesday. Theft of a SIOO shotgun from his country home, Eddy street and Road 31, was reported to police Friday by Frank P. Manley, president of the Indianapolis Life Insurance Company. August building in Indianapolis was $218,867 as compared with a figure of $102,261 in July, according to a survey issued today by S. W. Straus <fc Cos. August building l in 1931 was $1,092,516. Harold Hawley copped first in a twenty-lap pushmobile contest Friday night on the Coleman park course, defeating eight other contestants. His time was 11 minutes 21 seconds. George Hooper was second: Jimmy Demaree, third, and Albert Webb, fourth. A pedestrian and the rider of a motorcycle which struck him were injured today in the 1500 block. North Capitol Rvenue, today. Charles F. Baulmahn. 55. of Great Eastern hotel, the pedestrian, was cut oh the head, and the motorcyclist, David Maseld. 21. Negro. 2929 Paris avenue, was cut and bruised. The National party stands for state and municipal own*rship of j utilities as a meafts of lifting the i tax burden, Paul P. Elliott asserted Friday night at a meeting of the j Tenth w-ard at 233 South State avenue. Meetings scheduled tonight; are at Ray and Shelt;- streets Twenty-fifth and Station streets j and 2001 Winter avenue. Suit for SIOO,OOO damages for injuries sustained in an automobile collision June 27 near Crawfordsville has been filed in federal court by j Robert E. Goldstein, New York, against the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, and one of its truck drivers, Paul Fishero. A bucket is a poor substitute for a bank. Allistair Charles. 2830 North, Delaware street .attendant at the' Denham oil station at 1752 Boulevard place found today when he opened the station and found $16.48 which had been hidden in the bucket, missing. Stanley Coulter, dean emeritus of Purdue university, wa s principal speaker Friday night at , program presented by Indianapolis chapter,! Izaak Wjlton League in municipal l

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House Is Loot By United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 17.—A two-story, seven-room frame house was missing today, and H. B. Cohn was a perplexed real estate agent. Cohn went to the site of the house to check its condition for the owner, G. W. Potts of Butler, Mo. The lot where the house once stood was vacant. Neighbors said the house had been torn down and carted away several weeks ago.

GERMANY WILL VOTE Nov. 6 Is Set for Date to Choose New Secretary. By United Press BERLIN, Sept. 17.—The government decided today to hold the new reichstag elections Nov. 6, subject to approval of President Paul von Hindenburg. The president is expected to approve the date. The short-lived reichstag recently was dissolved by Chancellor Franz von Papen, on authority of the president, during a tumultuous session in which it attempted to pass a vote of misconfidence in the cabinet’s one-year economic recovery plan.

I gardens. More than 200 persons atI tended. Rally of the National party, openI ing the Perry township campaign, will be held Sunday afternoon at Somerset grove, 3300 block South Keystone avenue, speakers to include John Zahnd of Indianapolis, nominee for President; Ralph Green, for United States senator, and Ward B. Hincr for Governor. E. Curtis White, state representative from Marion county, will address the meeting of the East Thir-ty-Eighth Street Civic Lpague Tuesday night at 7:30 at Forest Manor M. E. church. “Power” will be the subject of an address by E. Howard Cadle in Cadre tabernacle, Sunday afternoon. The eleventh anniversary of the tabernacle is scheduled for Oct. 9. Uldine Utley, girl evangelist, will speak at the anniversary services. Suit for injunction against infringement of a patented device for packing fruit was filed in federal court against Fruit and Produce Packing. Inc., Indianapolis, today'by the Carpenter-Hiatt Sales Company of Colorado. HIGH SCHOOLS GROW 643 Pupils Over Last Year Are Enrolled. Increase of 643 in Indianapolis high schools, which boosts the total enrollment to 14.306, was announced today by school authorities. Increase was shown at every school except Broad Ripple, W’here (he loss was sixteen students. The lass there is accounted for. authorities said, by decrease in transfer of tuition pupils from township schools. Figures for the high schools: Shortrirfge. 3,183. increase 55; Manual Training. 1.720, increase 45; Technical, 5.861, increase 326: Broad Ripple, 347, loss 16; Washington. 1.612, increase 178; Crispus Attucks, 1,583, increase 55. WINS FIGHT FOR BODY Mother Keeps Child Despite Charge Support Money Is Spent for Booze. Despite allegations that she spent money paid for the support of her child for liquor, Mrs. Louise Hensley of Franklin today won her fight to retain custody of her son, Jackie, 20 months old. Father of the child, Donald Hensley, who is divorced from the mother, said he has been paying $5 a week support money, which he alleged was not used for the child, but for buying liquor. He also charged that the mother did not keep the child clean and that she “ran around” nights. Hearing was held before Superior Judge Joseph R. Williams. HELD ON RUM CHARGE Car Overturns; Whisky Found in Car. Police Assert. Thomas Hook, 21, of 32 South Arsenal avenue, was arrested Friday night on a blind tiger charge after the automobile he was driving was overturned at Washington street and Highland avenue. Police said, they found a pintjjottle of‘whisky! in the car. t

THE. INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GEM DEALER'S SUICIDE ENDS MURDER HUNT Slain Wife May 'Have Watched Jeweler Dig Her Own Grave in Cellar. (Continued From Page One) I ‘ * I an electric washing machine and an automatic water pressure tank. Frazier, however, is to be questioned further on some details. Jules Du Bois. brother of the suicide victim, will claim both bodies as soon as authorities release them. Sullivan said. He said he planned no further investigation, and indicated that routine inquests at Plymouth and at Quincy, where Du Bois kiled himself, would end the case. Du Bois ended his life by shooting himself through the head in the bathroom of a modest lodging house at Quincy. He had been in seclusion ; since Monday, posing as “Ralph ' Anderson of New York.’’ He used a .38 caliber revolver, perhaps the one with which his wife had been slain, a preliminary examination of her body revealed. Dig Through Concrete The day of developments in the mystery started with ordeis for a search of the Great Herring Pond j region by national guardsmen. A • routine emergency call to Quincy police from a lodging house keeper j reported a suspicious noise in a j locked bathroom. Police found “Ralph Anderson” ! sprawled in a corner. He did not regain consciousness. A calling card inscribed “Charles Edwin Du Bois” was fopnd in his pockets. Sullivan heard of Du Bois’ death, and dashed hurriedly to Great Herring Pond, sending orders ahead to have ten men with picks and shovels ready. “There’s been altogether too much recent construction here,” he said on arrival. “The whole property will be torn apart, if necessary, to find the body.” Conflicting Reports Aired Picks, wielded by national guardsmen, bit into the new concrete of the garage floor, of an annex foundation and of the cellar floor. Peter Winter, former policeman, noticed a coffin-shaped mound. His pick crashed through four inches of cement. His shovel dug into two feet of sand. Then he brought his pick into play again and it struck the body. It was the woman whase mysterious absence brought from Du Bois many conflicting stories. These stories, investigators believed, wove a net that closed slowly, but surely, until it snuffed out the life of the Tuckahoe Beau Brummel. Each hour, it seemed, some point in his web of stories was proved false. Official Montreal records revealed Mrs. Du Bois had not been killed in Quebec province, as he had claimed. Mrs. John Butler, reported by Du Bois to have been killed with his wife, wrote from the maritime i province that she was well and i working there. His Stories Are Weak The deeds to property naming Mrs. Grace Du Bois were found, with the subsequent revelation by Miss Atwood that she had used that name. Stains of a mattress in the Du. Bois bungalow were revealed as caused by human blood. A neighbor revealed that he had seen Mr. and Mrs. Du Bois together near their cottage the night of Aug. 10, a* day after Du Bois said she had left. But not until after Du Bois died was it revealed that the body he claimed was cremated in Montreal was in reality hidden in the cellar of their own home where it might have lain forever undiscovered. BOLIVIAJNJTURMOIL Citizens Demand Planes Bomb Paraguay Capital. By United Press LA PAZ. Bolivia, Sept. 17.—Angry crowds in the streets of the Bolivian capital demanded today that airplanes be sent to bomb Asuncion. Paraguay, after Bolivia charged to the League of Nations that Paraguayan soldiers bayonetted Bolivian wounded and stretcher bearers at Ft. Boqueron, in the Gran Chaco. STOCKS CHIEFS SUED: FIRM ASKS $21,000,000 Brokers Charge Exchange Has Set Up "Boycott and Blacklist.” By United Press NEW YORK. Sept, 17,-The New York Stock Exchange, its president. Richard Whitney, and forty members of its governing board were made defendants in a $21,000,000; damage suit filed in federal court | today by Pirnie Simons & Cos., Inc„j stock brokers. The brokerage company charged that the exchange had set up a “boycott and blacklist” against its business. The Pirnie Simons & Cos. originated the “package” sale of stocks, by which, for a set price, a buyer could obtain one share each in a number of diversified corporations, all neatly engraved and delivered to him in a black and silver port- I folio. | On June 22. 1932, the stock exchange governing board passed a resolution which prohibited its' members from doing business with any company dealing in package lots that did not conform with stock exchange regulations.

MERIDIAN AUTO LAUNDRY FRED H. BOWEN, Mgr. Now at Its New, Modern Quarters 824 N. Meridian Opposite Public Library We Invite Your Inspection

BANDIT CARRIES HIS BATTLE TO SUPREMEMURT Habeas Corpus Action Is Rushed to High Tribunal by Attorney. With Louisiana authorities determined to return him to that state. Hunter. B. Watson, bank rob- | ber and escaped convict, today api pealed to the Indiana supreme i court in an effort to gain liberty. He was arrested Sept. 9 at Twentyfirst and Harding streets, after a two-day hunt by police. Appeal was on denial this week by Superior Judge Jaseph R. Williams of a petition for a writ of habeas - corpus filed by E. Ernest Maholm, attorney. The petition asserted that Watson was held solely on telegraphic information from Louisiana authorities, and that no affidavit was on file against him. However, it was pointed out by the court that police had filed a charge of possessing deadly weapons. In superior court three today Mrs. Loletta Watson, 17-year-old wife of the bandit, won a victory when Judge William A. Pickens issued a mandate that $l5O f<sund on Watson's person when he was arrested be given to her. The wife took action against Chief Mike Morrissey, alleging he’ refused to turn the money over to her. The mandate was ,issued after Louisiana authorities failed to identify the money as bank robbery loot. Watson contends it is part of $470 hd* won gambling in an alleged liquor and gambling resort at 6400 North Harding street, which* W’as raided by deputy sheriffs shortly before the fugitive’s arrest.

ELECTRIC SHOCK KILLSjOY, 5 Lad Dies When He Holds Light Bulb in Hand. By United Press NEW ALBANY, Ind., Sept, 17. Five year-old William Shireman Jr. was electrocuted at the home of his parents here when he held an electric light bulb on an extension cord | in his hand. Approximately 105 volts of electricity passed through the boy’s body when he touched a bared pars of the wiring. The father, who had been using the extension while repairing an auto, found the body when he returned from the house. NAB BANDIT SUSPECT Alleged Hoosier Robber Held at Haines City, Fla. Declared to have been identified as one of the bandits who obtained $1,200 March 10 in a robbery of the First National bank of Monrovia, Ind., John Vinson, whose criminal career started when he W’as 16, is held at Haines City,- Fla. Vinson will be returned to' Indiana for trial, E. L. Osborne, chief of the state bureau of criminal investigation, said in announcing the arrest. Earl Northern, robber of a bank at Amo, Ind., who is serving a sentence, is said to have made a statement in which he accused Vinson of being his companion in the robbery and attempted kidnaping of Vincent A. Lapenta, Italian consult, his wife and daughter. ELECT MESCALL HEAD OF BENEFIT COUNCIL New Officers to Be Installed in Office on Oct. 5. James J. Mescall was named president of Marion council No. 738, Security Benefit Association, at the meeting held last Wednesday. He will be installed into office Oct. 5, along with the others chosen at the election. Omer Easterday, acting national president, will be in charge of the installation ceremony. Others elected were Paul Crider, first vice-president: Belle Gufkie, second vice-president; Rose Green, prelate, Pearl Hull, secretary; Margaret Kennebaugh, conductor; George Roberts, guard; Cecil Hull, sentinel, and Charles Kennebaugh, trustee. * CITY ORDER -UNJUST’ Right of the Columbia City officials to order the Public Service Company of Indiana to place all electric wires carrying more than, 5,000 volts underground, was denied ! Friday by the public service commission. \ Appeal from the city ordinance had been taken to the state commission by the company. The commissioners held the ordinance "unjust and unreasonable.”

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Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. Mall Accounts g m mm .. , , Al Has Paid Dividends ■"' H.. a „ a 10 E. Market St.

Married 50 Years Ago

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Mr. and Mrs. James H. Morton Mr. and Mrs. James H. Morton, 544 North Dearborn street, will celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary Sept. 24 by holding open house over the week-end. They were married in Morgan county and moved to Indianapolis in 1887, living at 1322 McLain street, now Richland street, from 1892 to 1924. when they moved to their present address. Both arei charter members of the Second Friends church. Five of seven children are living.

Jordan Lawyers Open Attack on Balm Suit

Move Paragraph About Adopting Children Be Eliminated. Attorneys for Arthur Jordan, Indianapolis capitalist, today filed a motion in superior court four to eliminate from the million-dollar breach of promise suit of Mrs. Margaret Melter, Goshen, all reference to the adoption of two children which Mrs. Metier charges they contemplated. The paragraph in Mrs. Melter’s suit which the motion attacks reads: I “The plaintiff alleges that her en- ! gagement of marriage to the defendant was known to her many friends and that during all the times herein complained of, she W'as led to believe and did believe by the statements of the defendant that they would be married and the event was expecteti to take place at most any time from and | after the 28th day of August. 1928, and just as soon as the defendant’s business plans could be arranged and concluded, which he stated would be done immediately, and that they would lead a quiet, secluded life; and that they would adopt two children and that he was now the happiest man in America; and he had this plaintiff arrange for the adoption of two children to be the children of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jordan.” The defense motion asks that all mention of children and Jordan’s happiness be stricken out on the grounds that it encumbers the record and beclouds the issues. Jordan recently married M£s. Alice B. Clarke, 5155 Central avenue. They reside in New York. MUNCIE BANDITSLAIN Two Others Are Wounded in Grocery Looting. By United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Sept . 17.—One bandit was dead and three others were under arrest today, two of them wounded, as result of robbery of a grocery store here late Friday. Luke Keith was shot fatally by police, who arrived as the robbers were leaving the store. Ed Duffy was shot in the abdomen and Andy Tuttle was shot in the legs as they attempted to escape on foot. John Hartranft, driver of the bandit car, w r as arrested without injury. Loot totaling $l3O in the robbery was recovered. TELEVISION DISPLAYED Demonstration of Apparatus Being Given at Block's Store. First demonstration of television in Indianapolis is being made at the William H. Block Company store with the Sanabria apparatus, called “the theater of tomorrow” by Morris Gest, who brought “The Miracle” to America. Performers appear in the Market street display window of the store and their images are projected on a screen in the store auditorium. Honor guest on today’s program is Dr. S. E. Elliott, Butler university professor of physics, speaking on the j significance of television. Others on the program are Sue Carolyn, Mildred Bell, Kenneth Hughes. Loretta McManaman, the Kentucky Moonshiners, Sanders Hawaiians and Mac, Jack and Charley. Cigarets, Cigars Are Stolen Cigarets, cigars and chewing gum j valued at sls were stolen early today from the Joe Siracusa grocery, | 810 West Ninth street, Siracusa re- , porte4 to -police.

Nagging Revolt By United Press MARSHFIELD, Wis., Sept. 17.—Oliver Geishard was so anxious to escape nagging of his wife and mother-in-law that he drank all the whisky he could, and then called police and asked to be arrested. He refused to let his wife pay a fine. Then Judge M. E. Acller sentenced him to thirty days in jail. “Give me a break, judge,” Geishard pleaded, “make It a year. The judge refused.

HELD AS HEAD OF FRAUD RING Charge Fake Advertising Racket in State. Alleged to be the head of a group of solicitors who have swindled Indiana firms of thousands of dollars with fake advertising contracts, John T. Sullivan, 45. of 2326 Nowland avenue, was to be given a hearing today before Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer on charges of vagrancy and forgery. Sullivan was arrested Friday on complaint of William F. Comer, secretary of the Van Camp Hardware and Iron Company, Inc., 401 West Maryland street, said to have been swindled of $990 on a contract bearing the forged signature of John T. Martindale, president of the company. The Van Camp contract purported to be for advertising in a labor organization publication which does not exist. Sullivan is held in jail, unable to provide bond. WARNS ON TAX DATE Sexton Urges Co-operation in Avoiding Last-Minute. Rush. Second warning that Marion county taxpayers must observe the deadline of Nov. 7, was issued today by Timothy P. Sexton, county treasurer. Sexton asked taxpayers’ cooperation in averting a last-minute rush and urged tax duplicates be obtained as soon as possible. Usual deliquent penalties will be added to any tax payments received after midnight, Nov. 7, Sexton pointed out. ANNUAL SHOOT~pTaNNED Hoosier Rifle and Pjstol Club Matches to Be Held Oct. 1. Matches in the annual shoot of the Hoosier Rifle and Pistol Club will begin Oct. 1 and end March 31, on the range of the club and the Indianapolis police department in the basement of Tomlinson hall.

1874-1932 1 Celtic Savings and Loan Shares continue to offer sound investment . continue to maintain their value. Your savings and loan pass book is still worth 100 cents on each dollar you have invested. Assets $13,787,241.11 Celtic Savings and Loan Association Member of the Marion County League 23 W. Ohio St.

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SfiPT. 17, 1932

REED FOSTtBS NEW DYNASTY IN MISSOURI Bennett Champ Clark Rising to Brightest Spotlight in State Politics. (Continued From Page One) wet, low-tariff, anti-court, antileague. but no radical. Reed rasped: "What we need in the United States senate Is an American. His Victory Is Surprising Thus the old warrior handed his sword to one on whom he looks as a worthy successor—without mentioning a name. When Jim dropped into his seat, gazing around in defiant challenge, the hall was still. Friends and supporters of other candidates glared at him. They knew whom he meant, and they knew his prestige throughout the state. Even so, they scoffed at suggestions that Clark could break through the alliance of urban and rural forces ranged against him. Clark did. however, win by 76,000 votes. His victory was all the more surprising, because Pendergast put over his gubernatorial candidate by 100,000 votes. He is the elderly Francis M. Wilson, a Grover Cleveland Democrat. Counted on to Carry Roosevelt Reversing the uusal process. Clark is counted on to carry the RooseveltGarner ticket to a triumph, even though Missouri has gone Republican nationally since 1916. Hoover carried Missouri by 172.000 against the wet, popular A1 Smith. In addition to his political accomplishments, Clark just has had published a life of “John Quincy Adams” that is acclaimed by the critics. Ik may be significant thfct Adams exhibited the same bluntness and boldness to be found in Reed and Clark. Opposed to Reed's prospective successor is Henry W. Kiel, former mayor of St. Louis. He is a goodnatured German, whom everybody loves and calls Henry. On quitting a political meeting, he hurries to his hotel to play pinochle with his friends. As an indication of how the Hoover prohibition plank is hurting, Kiel’s experience is illuminating. Beer is a more important issue here than repeal itself. Everybody says the return of prosperity depends on it alone. Beer makers, coopers, bottle and cork manufacturers, truckers—all await 2.75 per cent beer. / So it was up to Henry to convince the voters that beer would flow sooner under Hoover than the Democratic modification pledge. But his beer-loving, pinochle-plav-ing comrades were shocked. Looking at each other in amazement, they said: Vy, Henry is turning dry!” Since then, Kiel contends himself with proclaiming that he is a dripping wet. CANDIDATES TO~ MEET Democratic State Nominees Will Confer Sunday. Democratic state candidates will meet here Sunday with State Chairman Earl Peters and Dick Heller, head of the speakers bureau. The meeting will continue each Sunday until the election, Peters said.

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