Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 89, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1934 — Page 15

AUG. 23, 193 f

CITY FIRMS TO HAVE STATE FAIR EXHIBITS C. of C. Display to Show Products Made and Sold Here. Ih* manufacturers’ building at the ber officials announced todav. With the id*a of having Indianeont frnm in<iii*trial sources tbe square feet of floor space in building and made it available to its: Janalen. Inc.; Kothe. Wells A: Bauer Cos.. Century Biscuit Company St ok lev Bros A Cos M. Collins. Oval Ac Kof-ter. Holcomb Ac Hoke Manufacturing Company. Keeshin Motor Express of Indiana: United State-- Tire Company, Inc.; Shur-Line Fire Prevention Engineers, Indianapolis Stove Company, the Crane Company. Allen A. Wilkinson Lumber Company. Indiana Lumbermans Mutual Insurance Company. Forbes-Hubbard Lumber Company F. H Langsenkamp ComSupplv Company. Inc .; Marott Shoe Company. Advance Paint Company, Polar Ice and Fuel Company. Udell Works. Burnett-Bmford Lumber Company, Sinker-DavLs Company, Curtis Storage and Transfer Company. Capita! Paper Company, Bowes Seal-Fast Corporation, Mooney - Mueller - Ward Company. Butler university. Capitol Lumber Company, William H. Block Company. A B Dick Company. West Baking Company and Phitip-Carey Company. LINCOLN LAW SCHOOL REGISTRATION STARTS City Attorneys Are Added to University Faculty. Registration, for the fall term of Lincoln university, which has new j quarters at 136 North Delaware street, has begun at the offices of the registrar. 80.3 Union Title building. it was announced today by Edward Lustßarten. recently elected president. The school, which will employ the American Case Book system in its law school this year, has added the following attorneys to its faculty: Municipal Judge Wilfred Bradshaw, Ernest E. Owens, former Hendricks county prosecutor; Edward F. New, former Georgetown university instructor; Merle Wall, , former deputy attorney-general; Russell Dean, deputy prosecutor: Martin Conrad. John F. Linder and Francis E. Thomason. TWO BANDITS OBTAIN $46 FROM CITY MAN Pedestrian Held I p by Negro Pair on Way Home. W'alkine home late last night, j William Alev, 39. of 23 East St.| Joseph street, was held up and robbed of $46 by two Negroes. Mr Alev told police he was only a short distance from his apartment when the two men came from the alley and demanded his money at the point of a revolver. Mr. Aley is an employe of the Horton Ac Luse Cos.. Illinois and St. Joseph streets. Most of the money belonged to the company, he told police. TWO YOUTHS ARE HELD ON ROBBERY CHARGES Bovs. Ift and 14. Respectively, Are Said to Have Confessed. Two juvenile thieves, whose loot in a series of forays consisted of pop bottles, cap pistols, a baseball j and a slab of bacon, are being held today by police. The boys, ages 10 and 14. are said to have confessed. They are alleged to have robbed a parked car at Maryland and Mis-, souri streets, the Indianaoplis Ice Cream Company. 19 South West street; a downtown department store and a garage at 438 West Pearl EXTRA STALLS ORDERED FOR FAIR HORSE SHOW One Hundred Unemployed to Get Work at Cattle flam. Construction of eighty box stalls for horses at the cattle barn at the state fairground has been necessitated by the large entry list at the fair this year. eork Is under the supervision of the Marion county work division of tlv= Governor s commission on unemployment relief and will provide employment for about 100 men. according to estimates submitted by LINTON IS TAX FREE: LIGHT PLANT TO PAY City’* 1933 Expenses to Re Carried by Power Project. LINTON. Ind. Aug. 23.—Linion added its name to the small lust of Indiana cities which will operate in 1935 without a civil tax levy by action of the city council last night. The municipal light plant, which has borne the burden of the city expenses for several years, again prill be railed upon to bear expenses for 1935. the council ruled. SUSPECT YOUTH FREED Prove* He Could Not Have Taken Part in Robbery. Richard Erwood. 17. of 1831 North Rural street, held as a suspect in the robbery of a filling station at Sherman drive and East Tenth streets Sunday, has been released by police after he presented evidence to show he could not have been at the scene of the crime. He had been identified tentatively by a customer in the filling station. i Chokes to Death on Corn By 7 sit'd Pr,f WINCHESTER. Ind. Aug. 23. Charles Durham. 9. choked to death a few minutes after a gram of sweet corn became lodged in his throat.

Indiana in Brief

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Left to right, Marvin Lee Kay, Emil L. Kay, John W. Kay and Mrs. Susan E. Kay.

Aggregate ages of four generations of the Kay family form a total of 170 years. The group is headed by Mrs. Susan E. Kay, Malo, who Is 82. The other three generations are represented by John W. Kay, 58, Bedford school teacher; Emil L. Kay, 28, Salem, and his son, Marvin Lee Kay, 2. a a an n u By Itm'S Special COLUMBUS. Aug. 23 —Ernest Patrick. Columbus radio enthusiast, who says he has invented a machine which can be used for the diagnosis and treatment of disease, announces the device is to be manufactured on a commercial basis and that a sanitarium in which it will be used will be opened here. The machine makes use of the Abrams theory of electronic reaction, the inventor explains. This theory, with which some scientists disagiee, holds that diseased tissue gives off radio waves, and that these waves can be detected ana measured. It is held turther that by subjecting the diseased tissue to radio waves stronger than it emits, a cure can be ' Announcement that the machine is to be developed commercially was made by Mr. Patrick after a demonstration had been witnessed by Dr D C. Walesby, Columbus chiropractor, and W. A. Callahan and P. M Power, both of Chicago.

u a a Widow to Carry On By 7 imr Special MUNCIE. Aug. 23.—Mrs. Edward Thomas, widow of the Rev. Edward Thomas, Muncie mission worker popularly called Eddie, announces she will continue serving meals to needy men at the mission her husband established. She states that about seventy meals are served daily to men. most of whom are unable to work because of advanced age. Several of those aided, Mrs Thomas points out. are receiving old age pensions, the limit of which is $4 a month in Delaware county. Enabled to get their meals without charge, these men use their pension money to pay for sleeping quarters. a a a Tobacco Causes Death By 7 imr* Special LOGANSPORT. Aug. 25. -Strangulation as a result of cramming a package of chewing tobacco into his mouth was given in the coroner’s finding as the rause of death of Andrew’ Kozak. 50, inmate of the state hospital for the insane. Dr. Donald Miller, Cass county coroner, stated in the finding that the inmate obtained the tobacco stealthily from another inmate, and crammed it into his mouth, apparently to avoid detection by hospital attendants. a a a Church to Celebrate By 7 imr* Special CRAWFORDSVILLE. Aug. 23 - Celebration of the centennial of the Union Presbyterian church of Walnut township will be held Sunday. The celebration will open in the morning. A basket dinner will be served at noon and a varied program has been arranged for the afternoon. The church, which also has the name of Old Union, was founded Aug. 30. 1834. by pioneer Walnut township residents. a a a Theater Lease Changed Hr 7 i m> Special NOBLESVILLE. Aug. 23.—Lease of the Wild opera house here, heid for the past eight years by Mrs. Minnie Jackson. Crawfordsville. will be taken over Sept. 5 by Harry Vonderschmidt. Bloomington. He owns the Strand theater. Crawfordsville, and operates motion picture theaters in Greencastle and Bloomington.

FOSIER MOTHER OF •GIFT CHILD' FREED Vagrancy Charges Dropped by City Court. Mrs. Mabel McCane. owner of a Minneapolis (Minn.) maternity hospital. is free today after vagrancy charges against her were dismissed by Municipal Judge Dewey Myers yesterday. Mrs. McCane was arrested here uj>on the request of Minneapolis juvenile court authorities, and is involved in the legal batttle over 2-yoar-old Juliet Korth. daughter of Miss Eva Elizabeth Korth, Minneapolis. The child is in a children's home here pending a court decision on an appeal by Mrs. McCane that she may be allowed to keep the child. Miss Korth has signified that she wished Juliet, whom she gave 10 Mrs. McCane soon after birth, returned to her. Falls From Car; Killed By Failed Pres, ATTICA. Ind.. Aug. 23.—Injuries suffered in an automobile accident were fatal late yesterday to Miss Helen Cronkhite. 20 West Lebanon. She fell from the car when a door flew open.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

NEW DEAL FOES UNITE FOR WAR ON RADICALISM Liberty League Organized With Smith and Davis as Members. Bo T nitrd Per,, WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—The American Liberty League with prominent Republican and Democratic critics of the New Deal in command embarked here today on a nation-wide campaign against radicalism and in defense of the Constitution. High at the masthead are the flags of Alfred E. Smith and John W r . Davis. Democratic presidential nominees in 1924 and 1928. respec- ; tively. The capital is wondering whether the league will move ultimately from defense of property rights andindividual initiative to attack the New Deal. Announcement of the league's organization was accompanied by the statement it was not anti-New Deal and would not go into politics for the time being, nor participate in this year’s congressional election. Named with Mr. Smith and Mr. Davis to the executive committee were; Irenee Du Pont, Delaware industrialist; Nathan L. Miller, former Republican Governor of New York, and Representative James W. Wadsworth, former Republican senator from New York and a potential Republican presidential nominee in 1936. Senator Elmer Thomas (Dem.,

Whose Brown Derby? AUGUST 23 What Indianapolis man will be crowned with the BROWN DERBY at the Indiana State Fair on Sept. 6? W’hat man will win the plaque that goes with the derby? Clip this coupon and mail or bring to The Indianapolis Times. Just write your choice on the dotted line. Vote early and often. BROWN DERBY BALLOT To the Editor of The Times: Please crown with the Brown Derby as Indianapolis’ most distinguished citizen.

Okla.) characterized the league as “a strictly anti-Roosevelt organization of Democratic and Republican die-hards whose chief aim will be to undermine the New Deal.” Jouett Shouse, who was squeezed out of Democratic high command when the Rosevelt forces captured party machinery at the 1932 Chicago convention, announced organization of the league. Mr. Shouse is to be its president.

3 GET $3,000 Police Trail License Plate Clew in Bank Holdup. By Uniteri Press CLEVELAND. Aug. 23.—Two se*s of numerals on a bent license plate of an escape sedan, remembered by witnesses, were being traced by police today in an attempt to trail | three robbers who held up and j robbed a west side branch of the Morris Plan bank of $3,000 late yesterday.

Life Termer Kills Self By CnitcH Press MICHIGAN CITY. Ind.. Aug. 23. —Drinking lye solution because he

YOU CANT FOOL THE PALATE You may fool the eye with f artificial coloring matter, but you can't make bad whiskey taste good by adding artificial flavoring. Stick to Crab Orchard and know exactly what you are getting—straight- JjU Kentnckv whiskey, bottled \ / J from the barrel. CitibOtcluittl STRAIGHT KENTUCKY WHISKEY Accept no substitute A PRODUCT OF NATIONAL DISTILLERS

PAGE 15

“was tired of living.” Vincent Gomez. 32. life termer nt the state prison, committed suicide. It was announced today.