Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1934 — Page 20

PAGE 20

‘COULDN'T BEAR DISGRACE.'SAYS BEAUTY'SLOVER Fraternity Man Surrenders. Awaits Trial in Co-Ed’s Death. Bl * n -'4 P"lt NORMAN Okia Aug. 2 —N>al Myers who eouidn t sar.d the drgrace of hr .sweetheart s impending rr.'t’h-rhood. was m a jail ceil here todav trial on charges of murdering beautiful Marion Mills. Unr.er.Mty of Oklahoma beautyqueen. M-ers 21. surrendered to attnrr.r- s eariv yesterday, pleaded not guilty ye. terdav afternoon in a preliminary hearing and is scheduled to go *o trial in September Myers had beep, hunted for three weeks. He revealed he fled from here to the Mexican border, back through Texas and Oklahoma and thence ? o Colorado, from where he returned. Miss Mills died three weeks ago after she is aliened to have taken, or had administered, purgatives in an effort to thwart motherhood. Myer* reported to have witnessed her collapse called a physician to the home of a fraternity house cook e he and Miss Mills were staying. then fledHOLDUP SUSPECT FREED Letters Prove Arrused Out of City During C rimes. An air tight alibi todav released Elvr Noblett, 34 of 3165 North Illinois street, from suspicion as a holdup man who robbed three taxi drivers June 9 11 and 14 A letter was shown Municipal Judge Dewey Myers defuntely proving that Mr Noblett was out of the city at the time. Judge Myers dismissed vagrancy charges.

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DOLIFUSS’ SUCCESSOR

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A power in the Dollfu&s cabinet. where he served as minister of justice and education, Kurt Schuschmgg sketched here, is the new chancellor of Austria. A bitter foe of socialism, he played a prominent part in crushing the Socialists’ February revolt in Vienna and in muzzling the press.

DISTRIBUTORS STOCK Model Res. Price Sale Price No. 49 .7....7 $26.50,77... .77 sl4-95~ No. 556 $52.50 $26.25 No. 55 $39.50 sl9-75 No. 59 $42.50 $21.25 No. 886 $84.50 $42.25 No. 666 $79.50 $39.75 No. 776 $94.50 ... $47-25 No. 599 $87.50 $43-75 Radio and Electric Phonograph Combination OPEN EVENINGS PEARSON CO. inc. Formerly Pearson Piano Cos. 0 128 N. PENN. ST.. LI-5513.

HOKE IS NAMED TO HEAD STATE HOUSING DRIVE Emergency Council Head Gets Post; Work to Start Aug, 15. Hi 7 •<■ Sprrinl WASHINGTON. Aug. 2—Fred Hoke, or his successor in the post as national emergency council director in Indiana, will have charge of the initial program of the housing administration in the state, it was announed today by James A Moffett, national housing director. Mr. Hoke tendered his resignation from the NEC post, to be effective Aug. 15, but no successor has yet been named. Mr. Moffett explained that he expected to have his new organization whipped into shape to launch a nation-wide drive to repair and improve homes by Aug. 15, with the possibility that it will bring forth 51,500,000 in private fund expenditures. NEC directors will be in charge

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

in each state and the campaign will be on a local community basis, he said. Local bankers are expected to back the movement with the federal government underwriting personal loans to home owners to the extent of a 20 per cent guarantee. The NEC directors will function through the local chambers of commerce and other organizations in setting up local committees of interested citizens, such as architects, construction contractors and building supply dealers to boost the local campaign. Mr. Moffett stated. CITY VIOLATING LAW! THE FINE IS SI,OOO Signs in Streets Other Than in Black Are Prohibited. The city of Indianapolis daily is breaking the law and is liable to at least SIQOO in fines. A statehouse employe perusing the Indiana statutes of 1925 discovered a law prohibiting signs in the street painted any color other than black or black and white. The city has thirty-seven traffic signals painted yellow and a large number of warning signs painted a similar color. A $25 fine is provided for each offense.

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KOHLER STILL KEEPS HIS FAITH IN MODEL PLAN Ideals Are Not Yet Broken Down by Strike, He Asserts. BY WILLARD Ft. SMITH l nited Pre', Staff Corre.pondrnt KOHLER, Wis., Aug. 2—Former Governor Walter J. Kohler, who tended roaring factory furnaces himself in his youth, said today that rioting strikers have failed to shatter his ideals of friendly em-ployer-employe relations, although they did a thorough job of shattering the windows in his plant. The man who made pink, green and lavender bath tubs popular sat in his office amid a litter of broken glass. National guardsmen outside patrolled the streets of the model

industrial village which bears his name, seeking to prevent repetition of violence which brought two deaths. ‘T am not disillusioned about the relations that can be built up." said this industrialist, whose administration as Governor in 1931 and 1932 was praised by organized labor. The praise was volunteered in the face of an open-shop policy followed by Mr. Kohler in his own plant. "This strike was not called by our workers. There were relatively few of them in it. Outsiders caused it." Mr. Kohler said that in the midst of the labor troubles he found consolation in the fact that residents of the village of Kohler had been loyal to their Garden Village when the mob attacked the plant. “Less than 2 per cent of the Kohler villagers were involved jn this strike." he said. "To me that is an indication of their loyalty for their community and the company with which they are identified.’’ Kohler associates, as evidence of his interest in his employes and the development of pleasant surroundings for them, pointed out that Mr. Kohler himself abandoned the twelve-hour day for furnace workers in favor of an eight-hour day

back In the 1890s after tending the factory furnaces himself a* a youth. Likewise, under his direction the

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'company adopted a plan for indus- | trial accident insurance several ! years before it was required by law.