Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1932 — Page 14
PAGE 14
FREE POLITICAL BOSS IN TRIAL ON EMBEZZLING Maurice Maschke and Four Others Are Acquitted at Cleveland. By l nitnl Prcsn H CLEVELAND, Oct. 20.—Maurice Maschke, Republican county chieftain for nearly three decades, and four other politicians were acquitted Wednesday of charges of embezzling $177,273 from the county treasury after a trial that lasted for five weeks. The verdict was returned by Judges John J. Dempsey, Virgil J. Terell and Homer O. Powell, who had heard the case without a jury. Defendants with Maschke were Alex Bernstein, former chief deputy treasurer, and named as the principal in the indictment; former Councilman Herman H. Finkle; Charles Bernstein, half brother of Alex, and Charles Beckerman, prominent attorney. Their indictment followed a grand jury investigation, which resulted in a report that a shortage of $470,000 existed in the treasury. During the lengthy trial examiners testified that the amount of the shortage ranged from several hundred thousand dollars to nearly $2,000,000 over a period of five years after 1926. Prosecutor P. L. A. Leighley charged that money from the treasury had been diverted to private enterprises. Defense attorneys claimed that no embezzlement existed. REPORTER OF FUTURE MAY ‘SET’ OWN TYPE When He Writes Story on Typewriter, He’ll Do Linotyper’s Work. B‘U Science. Si nice NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—Every step in the production of the newspaper of the future from the time the reporter writes on the typewriter, until the finished newspapers shoot from the presses will be performed by the electron tube or “electric eye,” Orestes H. Caldwell, editor of Electronics Magazine, and former federal radio commissioner, predicted in opening a discussion before the New York Electrical Society Wednesday night New electron tube developments soon will make unnecessary the linotype operator, the compositor, and the engraver, he declared. H e visualizes type-setting machines operated directly from the reporter's own typewritten “copy” while half-tone illustrations will be made on a glorified dictaphone by the office stenographer. The electronic newspaper may be an actuality by 1942, Caldwell believes.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Hanna C. Anderson. 1819 Medford street. Ford coupe, 113-896. from Maryland and California streets. John Sweeney. Ravenswood, Chevrolet, sedan. 124-867. from in front of 227 North New Jersey street. Russel Wiper, Great Eastern hotel. Oldsmobile coach. 103-935. from 200 North Arsenal avenue. Harrv Nicholas. 1218 Bellefontaine street. Chevrolet coupe. 60-034, from in front of 2930 East Washington street. Henry E. Tonnis, 6468 Broadway. Auburn coach. 115-512. from Twenty-eighth and New Jersey streets. Eugene Bernard. 1220 Park avenue, Apartment 21. Nash coach, from Capitol avenue and Michigan street Francis Beik. 3835 Winthrop avenue. DeSoto coupe, from New York and Meridian streets.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered tfv police beiong to: Mrs. E. H. Cook. Y. W. C. A., Essex sedan, found at 600 North Alabama street Mark Wiliford. R. R. 17. Box 139. Chrysler oadster, found at 600 East Tenth street. ,j. vVvsong. 1334 Rcisner street. Chrysler sedan, found at North and Fayette streets.
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City Stormed by Teachers
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S-s-sh! Mum’s the word—but did you see all those misses walking with suitcases or looking at dress models in windows today? , Well, they’re . You guessed it, they’re part of the 12,000 public school teachers who storm the town yearly to learn, to see, and to buy.
Pardons, Paroles Asked by 166 State Convicts
Pardons and paroles will be asked by twenty-one Marion county prisoners, three of whom are serving life sentences, when the state prison board meets at Michigan City next Thursday. In a group of 166 seeking clemency, forty axe life term prisoners. Commutations of life sentences will be sought by the following Marion county inmates. Clifford Pollard, murder, sentenced Nov. 24, 1925; William Washington, murder, sentenced July 30, 1917, and Charles Woods, murder, Jan. 29, 1927. Others from Marion county and dates they were sentenced are: Cletus Brooks, Sept. 23, 1929, ten years.
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And in the above photo are two of them, Miss Naomi Annakin (left) and Mrs. Grace Gerrish of Clinton, and ‘mum’s the word’ but they’ve just left the Apollo Flower shop, 19 Nortth Illinois street, with a bunch of "mums” before attending a sectional meeting.
automobile banditry: Ray Bryant. Sept. 3, 1930. ten years, robbery; James Burke. March 23. 1829, five to twenty-one years, robbery and automobile robbery; James Clendenning, May 18. 1932, two to fourteen, conspiracy; Marcellus Cole, Oct. 8, 1925, ten to twenty-one, robbery. Ralph Conrad. Nov. 19, 1930. three to ten, vehicle taking and burglary; Roy Daw'son, Jan. 15. 1931, two to fourteen, embezzlement; Archie Dickson, Feb. 27. 1929, five to twenty-one. vehicle taking and automobile banditry; Charles Gibson, Nov. 19. 1930, three to ten, burglary; Ray Rudell. May 6, 1930, ten years, automobile banditry; Ed Auberry, June 4. 1932, three to ten, burglary; Russf 11 Bell. Jan. 10, 1924, ten to twenty-one, robbery; Evans Coffey. Nov. 29, 1924, ten to twenty-one, burglary: Matthew Roe. April 2, 1928, five to twenty-one. robbery. Henry Smith. June 2, 1924, ten to twenty-one. burglary; Michael Walker, March 8. 1930, three to ten. burglary; George Foster. June 21, 1924, ten to twenty-one, robbery, and Norman Lipscomb. Sept. 26, 1925, ten to twenty-one, robbery.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DIRE PERIL FOR WORLD SEEN IN GERMAN CRISIS Unless Solution Is Found Soon, Explosion Will Rock Earth, Is Claim. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.—Unless the German crisis is solved, and j soon, there will be an explosion in Europe which will rock the world. Such is the conclusion of a military and ecohomic survey of Germany by Dr. Paul Douglass of New York and Cincinnati, carrying an introduction by Senator Royal S. Copeland of New York. "Political dynamite is being generated by foreign domination over a sovereign country,” Dr. Douglass declares, and the only way to prevent an upheaval is' by granting Germany equal status with the
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other powers, economically and militarily. Dr. Douglas formerly was a writer for the Cincinnati Post. He graduated from the University of Cincinnati which, in 1931, bestowed upon him a Ph. D. A Taft fellow in political science at that university, he later became a fellow of the University of Berlin. He has made surveys for Johns Hopkins, the American Academy of Political and Social Science, and is the author of several works on international relations. • The earliest record of glue manufacture in Europe dates back to 1690, in Holland.
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SUES FOR ‘OVERTIME’ PAY WHILE IN ‘PEN’ $726 Sought by Man W T ho Says He Put in More Than 8 Hours Daily. | By I'nited Prre * STILWATER. Minn., Oct. 20. J Contending he had to work longer than eight hours a day during his : term in the state penitentiary, John
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H. Moeller. St. Paul, has filed suit against Warden J. J. Sullivan for $726.30 “back pay.” Moeller, who was in the prison from April 22. 1925, to May 8. 1931, for second degree forgery, said that he was forced to work six hours overtime etich day for 2,152 days. He was paid 45 cents a day. and on that basis for an eight-hour day, he claimed 33.5 cents a day for overtime. TEACHERS STRIKE for Roberts restaurant when in Indianapolis where they can get either cafeteria, or bill-of-fare table service (attentive waitresses), and where they can take their choice of 100 seats at tables, or in seml.private booths. “Our farm-to-consumer“ policy accounts for high quality, low prices. Roberts Restaurant is open day and night, they never close. Northeast Corner Kentucky Ave. and Maryland St. “Where the Statehouse Eats.” “Where the Farm Bureau Eats” “Where Newspaper Men Listen” One Block from Statehouse. One Block from Claypool Hotel.
OCT. 20, 1932
5325 Loot Taken In Home A burglar who knew the location of a small closet safe and the hiding place of its key obtained SIOO In cash and jewelry, valued at $225, Wednesday night at the home of Clarence Hick, 2642 Napoleon street.
TUBE SALE! * n d Saturday |p®f\ ™ • 5 to a Customer Tubes Tested Free. Replace Your Old Tubes Now! None Sold to Dealers
