Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 240, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1934 — Page 14

PAGE 14

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RAE POWELL IS ; NAMED G. 0. P. BOARD MEMBER City Attorney Selected to Serve on Election Committee. Appointment of Rae W. Powell, Indianapolis attorney, as Republican member of the Marion county board of election commissioners, was an- ! nounced yesterday by Edgar Hart, Republican county chairman. Mr. Powell. Othniel Hitch, the Democratic appointee, and Glenn B. Ralston, county clerk, will comprise the board. Mr. Powell was to be sworn in by Mr. Ralston today. The election commissioners will be in complete charge of the primary and fall elections in the county.

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Indiana News in Brief a m m a a a ana Interesting Stories About Events in Lives of Hoosiers Written and Assembled for Quick and Easy Reading.

By Timet Special TIPTON, Feb. 15.—Suit for settlement of the estate of Richard T. Dobson, on file in Tipton circuit court here, recalls an unsolved murder mystery. With more than a score of wounds on the head, the body of Mr. Dobson was found April 14, 1932, in a swamp near Angola. A few days previously he disappeared from the Sacred Heart Home for the Aged at Avilla, to which he had. turned over about $1,500 in return for assurance that he would be given a home for the remainder of his life. Following his death, it was learned that after leaving the institution, he went to the home of Frank Reissesser near Angola and was working for his board. He left the house April 6 with an ax, stating he intended to chop wood. On his failure to return at night, a search was started, but it was not until eight days later that his body was found. Previously, his ax was found sticking in a stump. A mittened and stiffened hand of the dead man was clasped about a rock which he apparently had picked up to use as a weapon. Authorities said his head bore twenty-seven wounds which they believe were inflicted with a club. No clew to identity of the slayer ever was found. Mr. Dobson, bom in Prairie township, Tipton county, where he lived many years, had often expressed fear of death at the hands of an enemy whose identity he never disclosed, acquaintances said. The slaying victim was a member of a family which twice before had felt the hand of tragedy. His father committed suicide and a brother, James Dobson, was found dead in the ruins of his fire-swept home at Kempton. At the time of his death, reports were current that he had been slain and the house set afire to hide the crime.

Talks 'Out of Turn’ By Timet Special MUNCIE, Feb. 15.—Because Allen Bogue spoke ‘out of turn” in the presence of two rival automobile salesmen, a farce-comedy was staged in city court before Judge J. Frank Mann. Bogue caused the arrest or one of the salesmen, John L. Snodgrass, on a charge of assault and battery. The court acquitted Snodgrass without even hearing defense testimony. Snodgrass and the other salesman, E. R. Rawlings, were seated together at the counter of a restaurant. On another stool a considerable distance away, Bogue sat, munching a sandwich. “We drove her to Michigan City and held her at ninety miles an hour for two hours,” Snodgrass boasted of the car he sells. “Any man who drives ninety miles an hour ought to be arrested and his license taken away,” Bogue remarked “to the house.” During an argument which followed, Bogue said he was shoved off the stool by Snodgrass. “I didn’t even get to finish my sandwich,” Bogue complained as the court discharged Snodgrass. non 'Blessing’ Costs sls By Timet Special TIPTON, Feb. 15.—Laying aside of personal views might be difficult in the case of a gypsy should Lemuel S. Todd be elected judge of Tipton Circuit court, an honor for which he is a candidate. Mr. Todd appealed to the sheriff to locate a band of gypsy women who stopped at his home and “blessed” sls which he carried in a pocketbook. The money departed with the gypsies.

Suit Follows Prank By Times Special LOGANSPORT, Feb. 15.—A Halloween prank perpetrated on Oct. 31, 1933, is the basis of a $5,300 damage suit filed in Cass circuit court here against Richard Leffel, Robert Mikesell and Edwin Swanson by Charles L. Everman. Defendants, the complaint states, placed a barricade of fodder across a road. Everman ran into the barricade with his automobile before dawn on the following day. He alleges he incurred rib fractures and head and face lacerations. He seeks $5,000 as a result of the injuries and S3OO for damage to his automobile. a a a Safer Jail Urged By Timet Special KOKOMO, Feb. 15.—Recommendation that heavy screens be placed over windows of cells in the Howard county jail to prevent passing of any objects to prisoners has been made by the grand jury. O tt tt Inherits $22,000 By United Brest BRAZIL, Ind., Feb. 15.—Approximately, $22,000 awaits Earl Crawford, East Liverpool, 0., formerly a member of a local civilian conservation camp, as soon as he can be located. Crawford came to Brazil with the original C. C. C. contingent last July and was believed to have joined a group of itinerant maga-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

zine solicitors after being discharged a month later. Clay county officials have been advised that the youth’s grandfather died recently at McKee’s Rocks, La., leaving Crawford one-third interest in an estate valued at $66,000.

MOTION PICTURES AP9MO£?v 20c ' I TOMORROW Soak |r|Jf CHARLOTTE-HENRY fU gary" cooper !| a JACK OAKIE M CARY GIANT, EDNAIMAYiOLIVER •<£ CHARLIE, RUGGLES 3 MAY, ROBSON jt BABY LeROY £ LOUISE FAZENDA RICHARD ARLEN : W. C. FIELDS (VvtJ SKEETS GALLAGHER 7*** MAE MARSH POLLY MORAN ROSCOE 4 KARNS ) 7 ROSCO ATES I Ji ALISON SKIPWORTH >-££4 NED SPARKS /^Fin.i^j FORD STERLING / ™' T 1 -LITTLE BOY BLUE” RAYMOND HATTON [ gaynor I ,-Reel LafT Hit HORTON \ / -PAEON MY PUPS" W T N n ERR Ol VcAROLINAyI Movietone News I

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NORTH SIDE X i T TB/'Y'TOT' Talbot & 22nd I AI.Kf 111 Double Feature Leslie Howard “BERKELEY SQUARE” ‘‘INVISIBLE MAX” o, jf j 19th and College SfratlOrd Double Feature juauutu wm Rogers ‘‘STATE FAIR” “JUSTICE TAKES A HOLIDAY** i a Noble at Mass MLliliA Double Feature Bruce Cabot “MIDSHIPMAN JACK” “BEFORE MIDNIGHT” GARRICK Double VeaVure vjmvtvnjiv Lyle Talbot “COLLEGE COACH” “SHADOWS OF SING SING** n r v 30th Se Northwester* la-HiA. jack Pearl “MEET THE BARON” D TT7 Illinois at 84th |VI 1 Double Feature * Leila Hvams “SATURDAY’S MILLIONS,” “JIMMY AND SALLY” IjPTOWN wSbSf v e.'-eTTJ.y Gloria Stuart “INVISIBLE MAN,” “EMPEROR JONES." nx Cil a tty St. Clair, Ft. Wayne SI (iLAIK Paul Lukas J 1 * V>iL>/YllV Katharine Hepburn “LITTLE WOMEN” r\fa r> ana 2351 Station St, DREAM Ja M„ D^ f p r T “PRIZEFIGHTER AND THE LADY** ZARING ffiriasS "BY CANDLELIGHT” EAST SIDE DfVnl f Dearborn at 10th IVI f ULI Double Feature Chas. Farrell “GIRL WITHOUT A ROOM” “KING FOB A NIGHT’* IBVTMP 5507 S. Wash. IIV T lit U Four Marx Bros . “DUCK SOUP” __ HAMILTON jEtSSSr . .. Lionel Barrymore “HER SWEETHEART” STRAND Joan Bennett, Katharine Hepburn “LITTLE WOMEN” Hollywood “HOOPLA” 4 , “TBUNBIJUNG HBKD* ,

Law Course Lengthened By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 15. Described as a contribution to the tendency toward higher standards for the legal profession, the law school of Indiana university, after 1936, will require four instead of three years work for graduation. The four years will be in addition to the two years of pre-law school study already required, Dean Bernard C. Gavit of the school explained. aaa * * Fight Chicken Thieves By Timet Special NOBLESVILLE. Feb. 15.—Sheriffs and police chiefs representing Hamilton, Madison, Hancock and Tipton counties are co-operating in a campaign against chicken thieves in their respective localities. Authorities state chicken stealing has reached alarming proportions in this section of Indiana during the last two years. o tt a Charge River Pollution By Timet Special COLUMBUS, Feb. 15.—City officials of Seymour are preparing to

EAST SIDE T A PAM A 2442 E. Wash. 1 chas. Farrell “AGGIE APPLEBY’^ Paramount “ONE MAN’S JOURNEY’’ EMERSON 4 iy.eF „ Warner Baxter “AS HLSBANDS GO,” “TAKE A CHANCE’* TUXEDO “Virsi”* “KING OF JAZZ” SOUTH SIDE SANDERS Mary Brian FOG “THRILL HUNTER” FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Leslie Howard “BERKELEY SQUARE’ 1 BL ACK BE At TV ORIENTAL “LITTLE WOMEN” Roosevelt l Z,n.Xtl“ THE PENTHOUSE” AVALON June Knight "LADIES MUST LOTT” LINCOLN ’Sz'Mt “SONG OF SONGS,” “WHEN LADIES MEET” GARFIELD SL’ST “AGGIE APPLEBY” west SIDE BELMONT Joan CrawTord° n * I rranchot Tone “DANCING LADY” rv a rnir 2540 W. Mich DAISY Double Feature 1 Katharine Hopburn “MORNING GLORY” “LOVE. HONOR AND OH BABY” Cnp A T|7 W. 10th at Holmes' OlrVlEi Maurice Chevalier “WAT TO LOVE’* A Dp A HR w . KenhTT mVCAL/L Margaret Churchill * *■ PGOU. WITHOUT A BOOM*? , . ■■

file a complaint with the state board of health against the city of Columbus, alleging that bad taste and odor of water used at Seymour, pumped from White river, is caused by dumping of refuse into the stream by the Mooney tannery here. tt xr Utility Defeats Town By Timet Special VALPARISO, Feb 15.—The town of Chesterton has lost Its fight to establish a municipally owned electric plant and distribution system. Ben Rees, special judge in Porter circuit court here, has ruled that public necessity and convenience do not require establishment of the plant. He ruled in a suit brought against

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IMiLUiIWa ON THE STAGEI BIGGEST SCOOP IN HISTORY! THE W* IH ORIGINAL *3.30 NEW YORK MUSICAL SHOW! CAST # OF 621...COMPLETE...INTACTI PLUS A SUf ERLA- p| ip ml: G f o ? I GE ; AS ? EL Wk HOLLIS DAVE NNY J Ju /./ " As the Unforgettable ‘‘Dr. Engel” yy, ll T*u tt*\ MALE CHORUS of 28 XV Hi ***; To * LjSrmK beauty chorus of 16 4 h| 6l* *■ o e 1 f Hear “The Drinking Song,” “Serenade,” M H c 1 R “ J “Deep in My Heart” and other im■l r FJ * mortal melodies by SIGMUND ROMBERG

the town by the Northern Indiana Public Sendee Company, which supplies Chesterton with electric current. The court commented that the town “has no definite plan and no accurate and detailed information as to the manner of operating and conducting” a municipal plant.

"at N rr,C ** and | Feb. HARBOR BAT., 75c Conple—9:So to 2 SI N., 30c Couple—9 to 12:30 THI RS., 20c Couple—o to 12:30 Old Dance Tickets Good 8c in Trade Saturday One Block South Municipal Airport

FEB. 15, 193?

SUNDAY ONLY HENRY BUSSE and His Famous Orebe.tr* 19— ARTISTS— 19 Tickets 55c Till 6 P. M. Sun. After 6:00 80c Incl. Tax Table Reservations 75c Couple DANCE TOMORROW MILLER WELCH and HU Orchestra 25c BEFORE 9:00 R“inDlm r oor