Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 128, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1934 — Page 3

OCT. 8. 1934.

JUDGE KERN IS SECOND WARD RALLYSPEAKER Democrat Mayor Nominee to Talk Tonight at Party Meeting. Superior Judge John W. Kern. Democratic nominee for mayor, will be the headline speaker tonight at a Second ward rally in the Odd Fellows hall. Tenth and Rural streets. Other speakers will be’Otto Ray, sheriff nominee, and Anderson Ketchum. state tax board secretary. Dr. William H. Larrabce, Eleventh district congressional nominee, will be the principal speaker at a meeting tonight at 508 Mam street. Beech Grove. Other speakers at the r ally will be Criminal Judge Frans P. Baker, candidate for re-election, and Joseph T. Markey, superior court one nominee. Several speakers are on the program of the meeting of the Spen-cer-for-Prosecutor Club tonight at 528 Indiana avenue. They are Mr. Spencer, Judge Baker, Municipal Judge Dewey Meyers, Miss Hanna Noone, Center township trustee; State Representative Henry J. Richardson Jr., Robert E. Skelton and Dr. Theodore Cable, nominee for city council. McKinney Will Speak Frank A McKinney, Democratic nominee for county treasurer, will speak at a noon faceting of the Marion County Democratic Women's Club tomorrow at the Washington. Women to Hear Kern Superior Judge John W. Kern, Democratic nominee lor mayor, will be the principal speaker tonight at a meeting of the Seventh Ward Women's Democratic Club at the home of Miss Sara Henzie, 1901 North New Jersey street. Mrs. Badger Williamson is president of the club. Law Club Elects Earl Wolf has been elected president of the Democratic Club of Benjamin Harrison law school. Other officers are Sheldon Key, vice-president; William Erbecker, secretary, and Miss Samuella Shearer, treasurer. Club Names Officers Allen Jameson heads the Eleventh Ward Young Democrats Club. Other officers elected last night at an organization meeting at 452 Massachusetts avenue are Miss Fannie Mae Burns, vice president; Miss Zamora De Poy, secretary, and Gordon Fleming, treasurer. M’Nutt, Minton to Speak By I nnr* Special HAMMOND. Ind., Oct. B.—Governor Paul V. McNutt and Sherman Minton, Democratic candidate for the United States senate, arrived here today for conferences with party leaders and for several addresses. Mr. Minton will speak this afternoon before the nonpartisan Hammond League of Women Voters. Tonight. following an old-fashioned torchlight parade, Mr. Minton will speak before a Democratic rally in the auditorium of Hammond high school. Governor McNutt will make his Calumet speaking appearance Wednesday morning before children of Hammond high school and at noon to a combined meeting of Hammond luncheon clubs in the Masonic temple. Organization of the Lake County Democratic Veterans’ Association, pledged to support Mr. Minton, was completed yesterday by Lake count} veterans’ leaders. Stump Praises Minton fly Time.* special MONTICELLO. Oct. B.—An appeal for the election of Sherman Minton, Democratic candidate for the United States senate, was made here Saturday night by Albert Stump. Indianapolis. Democratic candiadte for the same office in 1926 and 1928. Pointing out that the Roosevelt administration moved speedily to restore order from chaos. Mr. Stump asserted that the Issue of the cur * rent campaign is the "mocking paradox of want in the midst of plenty.” His address here in Mr Minton s interest was viewed as an indication of Democratic party amity, since Mr. Stump was one of the leading adherents of R. Earl Ppters in the senate nomination contest. TOMATO SALE DISPUTE TAKEN INTO COURT Legality of t anners’ Contracts With Growers Under Fire. The legal battle of Indiana canners to prevent tomato growers from selling crops to others after contracting to deliver all their anticipated crops, will be determined m Marion circuit court on Oct. 22. before Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox. French & Matlock Brokerage company seeks an injunction against Chester C. Kearns. Indianapolis tomato buyer, and Ivan C. Morgan, of Morgan Packing Company. According to the complaint, growers agreed to sell their crops at $lO a ton but sold in the open market at sls. when prices soared due to the drought. FEDERAL EDUCATION CLASSES START HERE —— Enrollment Opens in Emergent y Adult Courses. Enrollment in classes in the fed- \ eral emergency education program for Indianapolis started today and i will continue through Wednesday at all libraries, public schools and community houses. More than 8 000 adults and young persons above school age are expected to enroll, according to William A Myers, city supervisor. Classes will be held in neighborhoods with the largest number of pupils. Courses ranging in grade levels from beginners to the university level will be held in practically every .subject which a sufficient number of pupils wish to study. Enrollment hours will be from 8 to 4 at the schools and community houses and from 1 to 9 at the libraries.

TORRID LOVE LETTERS READ TO ‘TRAGEDY’ JURY

MpSZZM, .Rcadinz r - his torr.d love ’rr ’o Margaret Cram. your. 2 mujHH •'■a'■her -ra- f.r .r.m BH Robert Edwards, cor.v.cted killer -' , I ; ’ 'Wgr Wm F:pr ‘ a MrKechme. his sweet - % -Wfcipr ~ / heart, in the 'American Tragedy" .. ■ trial. J Harold Flannery, asistxV>, / mm ant district attorney, is shown WrW ■*- reading the letters to the jury af’e r Edwards' offer to change his Mm refused ■- hfcft % ‘‘ r ’ r :: ” n - ’ :r ; ' 3S£* jag Ma" Ifßt, leads: I In-, r • ••■. hom'-. ". _ Please be sure of it. Buddy.”

Board Feels State Loses ‘Face’ in Barroom Murals by Library Artist

BY JAMES DOSS Times Staff Writer The esthetic sensibilities of some members of the state library building commission have suffered a bruise and mortification has set in, it became known today. The latest artistic tempest in a teapot is all because the same artist who painted the state library building murals also is the creator of j the handsome decorations in anew downtown barroom and restaurant. John Scott Williams, famous New York mural painter, was paid approximately SII,OOO for murals in the state library building, for which the firm of Pierre & Wright were architects. The architects were instrumental, it was understood, in obtaining the library commission for Mr. Williams. Hence, what was more natural j

THREE BANDIT SUSPECTS HELD Trio Is Nabbed at Point of Revolver by Station Attendant. John E. Brentstctter, attendant at the Rose-Mar oil station, R. R. 1, Bridgeport, nabbed three robber suspects at the point of a revolver early today. The trio, arrested by police called to the scene by their captor, included Leroy Grubbs, 17, of 1624 Hoefgen street; Raymond Ward, 17, of 533 Fletcher avenue, and William Brav, 18, of 219 South Noble street. All were charged with burglary after Mr. Brentstetter said that he had found them inside the station. They apparently had entered by using a tire tool to force a window. The suspects, police allege, admitted stealing a car in which they drove to the oil station. The car was recovered in a nearby field. MRS. STANLEY AGAIN PICKED BY W. C. T. U. Liberty Woman Nam.'d President for Fourteenth Year. By United Press NORTH MANCHESTER. Ind., Oct. B—Election of organizers, branch secretaries, evangelists and directors brought the fourteenth annual convention of the Indiana W. C. T. U. to a close here today. A special report was made by the budget committee, which recommended that an extensive advertising campaign be carried on in the interest of prohibition. Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley, Liberty, was re-elected president of the organization for the fourteenth consecutive year at Saturday's session. AUTO DEATHS INCREASE IN INDIANA_F OR 1933 Figures Released bv U. S. Show Gain of 120 Over 1932. By Thnes Special WASHINGTON. Oct. B.—Motor vehicle fatalities in Indiana in 1933 increased by 120 over the 1932 figure according to a summary issued today by the bureau of census. The 1933 toll from automobile accidents was 1.137. In 1932 it was 1.017. Both figures are below the 1931 high of 1.216. Highway smashups accounted for 979 of the 1933 fatalities. Collisions with railroad trains cost 133 lives and with street cars twenty. The other five deaths were by motorcycles. SCHMEDEMAN GAINING AFTER LEG AMPUTATION Wisconsin Executive May Leave Hospital in Ten Days. By L tilted rress MADISON, Wis. Oct B—Governor Albert G. Schmedeman, whose left leg was amputated in an emergency operation Friday night, maintained an improvement in condition today. Physicians said he may be able to leave the hospital in ten days. The amputation was made necessary by gangrene resulting from fracture of a small bone in a fall. GROUP TO MAKE TRIP Traffic Club to Select Delegation for Ohio Parley. Arrangements will be made at the Indianapolis Traffic Club luncheon tomorrow to send a delegation from here to the Associated Traffic Club 6 of America fall meeting at Columbus. O. next Monday through Wednesday. Included in the Indianapolis delegation are M. C. Safford, president; B. L. Mather, secret ary- treasurer; B. D. Rhodes. D. R. Changnon and O. G. Hagemann. Chicken Dinner Arranged The Woman's Benefit Association. No. 140. will give a chicken dinner at noon Wednesday at 230 East Ohio street. Mrs. Josephine Coibion is arrangements committee chairman. A card party will follow.

than for the architects to obtain the talents of Mr. Williams, after designing the new and handsome barroom? Mr. Williams did the paintings. Lovely ones they are, too. Very titillating to the eye and as artistic in their metier as those of the state library building. A far cry from the soap-and-cleanser creations of the tramp "artist” which adorned saloon mirrors before prohibition. The barroom in question probably is much too ornate and too well conducted to be classified as a saloon, but a "saloon by any other name is just as sour,” think the aggrieved members of the library commission. The resentment flared recently at the last meeting of the board. One member intimated, to put it mildly, that Mr. Williams had prostituted his recognized artistic tal-

Poet Riley Honored in Ceremonies at Hospital John H. Finley, New York Times Editor, Stresses Appropriateness of Memorial Before 2,500. The spirit of James Whitcomb Riley again showed its hold on the hearts and minds of men yesterday afternoon as 2,500 visitors gathered in the auditorium of the Indiana university medical school to celebrate both the tenth anniversary of the dedication of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children and the birthday of the beloved Hoosier poet.

Principal speaker at the festivities was Dr. John H. Finley, associate editor of the New York Times, who said that the local children's hospital constituted a far greater tribute to Riley than any epitaph or any memorial hewn from marble ever could. “I myself have seen monuments of praise all the way back to the tomb of Tutankhamen and the city in Asia Minor where the deeds of Alexander the Great were recalled, but I have seen nothing more beautiful in conception or finer in its tribute than this Riley hospital,” Dr. Finley said. A feature of the afternoon was a message from Paraguay by Meredith Nicholson, United States minister to that country and a long-time friend and companion of Riley. The manuscript was read by Dr. Carltton B. McCullough, who prefaced the Nicholson letter with some poetry of his own. Mr. Nicholson said in closing his message, “So I propose a toast to Riley and to the Indianapolis of which he was the bright particular star; and to John Finley, the finest type of American citizen and your visible guest; and to all who are gathered in the melodious name of Riley, I extend my hearty good wishes, and may the spirit he sang into songs of our homeland abide with you forever.” The novelist said that the memory of Riley was alive in the American legation in Ascuncion, the Paraguayan capital, and told of a party there in which Riley's poems were read to members of the Argentine legation, including the ambassador. He pointed out that the American military attache chose as his favorite lines in the poet's works; “There wasn't overly much pie et “Durin’ the army.” Hugh McK. Landon, president of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association, opened the program with a review of the history of the hospital's financial position. He said; “Ten years ago today we gathered on this campus to dedicate the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children. The imagination of the people of Indiana had been deeply stirred by the suggestion of such a memorial to the Hoosier poet. They had responded with abounding generosity to the appeal for funds.” Mr. Landon went on to point out the great improvements in the physical equipment of the hospital which had been made possible through the generosity of the public. More than $2,400,000 in gifts from interested individuals has been expended on the hospital, he said. Almost 40.000 children have received care at the hospital, according to Mr. Landon. Os these 25.000 were bed patients and 15.000 outpatients. In closing Mr. Landon paid tribute to members of the hospital staff whom, he said, made the splendid spirit of the hospital what it is today. He named for special honor for their work for the Riley hospital three deceased members of the staff. Dr. John Oliver. Dr. Lafayette Page and Dr. Frank Morrison. Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana university, closed the program with a brief address. ROINES CLUB ACCEPTS EIGHT MANUAL SENIORS Boys Are Honored for General Excellence in School. Eight boys have been taken into the Romes Club, Manual high scheel's senior boys honorary drganiization. it was announced today. The qualifications for admittance to this honor group are outstanding participation in school activities and high scholarship. New members are Charles Goebel, Robert Bottin, Harry Einstanding, Arthur Lindgren, Fred Burgman. Richard Hill, Edmund Phillips and Herschel Duncan.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Reading of his torrid love letters to Margaret Crain, young music teacher, was the first incident to break the indifferent calm of Robert Edwards, convicted killer of Freda McKechnie, his sweetheart, in the “American Tragedy” trial. J. Harold Flannery, asistant district attorney, is shown reading the letters to the jury after Edwards’ offer to change his plea to guilty was refused. The excerpt from one of the letters reads: “I love you, honey darling. Please be sure of it. Buddy.”

ents by doing murals for a bar. However, the complaint was not much in solicitude for Mr. Williams, but rather in the belief that the sovereign state of Indiana has suffered some loss to its dignity. It was not that the aggrieved library commissioners questioned the propriety of the barroom murals. It is not know whether they’ve even seen them. They just can’t help feeling that there now exists a very dubious bond between the state library and a saloon. The more tolerant members of the library commission pointed out that the fact that Mr. Williams painted the library murals hardly gave the board the right of censorship over his subsequent work. However, the indignant members of the commission still are unappeased. They just think it isn’t right.

BUSSES START NEW ROUTES TOMORROW Changes Are Expected to Speed Up Service. Nev and more convenient routings for the Riverside and crosstown bus lines will be established tomorrow. Riverside busses will operate on Meridian street, instead of Delaware, between the Circle and Thirtieth street, thus shortening the present route by four blocks and cutting a number of minutes from present schedules. The present Thirtieth street crosstown bus lines will be extended from its Thirtieth and Dalaware terminus west to Illinois street, making connections with North Meridian busses and Illinois street cars. SHIP _ SINKS"riTGALE7 THREE LIVES ARE LOST Four Members of Crew Reach Shore in Ontario Tragedy. By United Preen GRAVENHURST, Ontario, Oct. 8. —Three men were dead and the Muskoka Lakes Navigation Company’s steamer, Waome, was lying at the bottom of Lake Muskoka today. The victims were the Rev. L. D. S. Coxson, Toronto; Captain Arthur Thompson, Barlochan. and the boat's captain, C. W. Henshaw, of Gravenhurst. The boat foundered during a storm. Four members of the crew, the only others aboard, managed to fight their way to shore. LOSES LEG IN ACCIDENT Woman Hurt When Motorcycle Fails to Make Turn. Three persons riding on a motorcycle on state road No. 67 were injured one critically, last night when the machine failed to make a turn twenty miles northeast of the city. Mrs. Eva Pyle, 23, suffered a compound fracture of one leg which necessitated its amputation at city hospital. Her husband, William Pyle, 29, and her sister-in-law, Miss Ethel Pyle, suffered minor injuries. HUB FISHERMEN STRIKE Boston Fears Trouble on Waterfront; 3.000 Affected. By United Preen BOSTON, Oct. B.—Trouble on the waterfront was feared today as Boston's fish strike became effective, threatening a $10.000,000-a-year industry. The strike affected some 3.000 workers, who demand higher wages and better working conditions.

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G. 0, P. SLATES 75 RALLIES FOR PRESENT WEEK Hope to Maintain Lively Pace Set by Opening Meeting Here. Seeking to maintain the momentum achieved at the so-called official opening of the county campaign, Republicans will hold approximately seventy-five rallies this week in Indianapolis and Marion county. Wajter Pritchard, Republican candidate for mayor, was scheduled to speak at three meetings today, one at noon before the Monday Luncheon Club in the Walker theater; one this afternoon at 623 North La Salle street, and one tonight at 834 Roache street. Other speakers at the meeting tonight will be Delbert O. Wilmeth, Twelfth district congressional nominee; Orel Chitwood, sheriff nominee; Cal E. House, William Gnmer and John C. Bankett. Ralph Gregg will be the principal speaker at a meeting of the Irvington Republican Club tonight. Miss Adele Storck and Joseph Belcher will speak at a woman s meeting at 5460 East Washington street. Robert L. Brokenburr, state representative; William H. Jackson and Mr. Bankett will speak tonight at a meeting of the Twelfth Ward Colored Republican Club at 906 Indiana avenue. Woman Lawyer Honored Mary Elizabeth Ramier, Indianapolis attorney and secretary of the Indiana Association of Women Lawyers, has been appointed vice-chair-man of the Republican women's county speakers bureau. More than a hundred young Republicans have organized the G. O. P. Minutemen to "pinch hit” if any scheduled speaker is unable to attend a meeting.

COURT DEFIED IN DUALJOB FIGHT Two More Republicans File for Senate Despite Restrainer. In the face of a Marion circuit court order restraining the designation of candidates to displace Senator E. Curtis White and John Bright Webb, Democratic holdovers, two additional Republican candidates were named today in petitions filed with the election board. The candidates are Ralph K. Kane, Marion county, and Will H. Adams, Marion and Johnson counties. Senators White and Webb have obtained from Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox a temporary order, returnable Oct. 15, preventing acceptance of candidates for their positions, which opponents allege were vacated when the senators accepted other state posts. The petition for injunction declared the senate alone has authority to declare the positions vacant. SON FACES QUIZZING IN AX MURDER OF MOTHER Suspect Denies Slaying Wealthy Canadian Woman. By United Preen ONTARIO. Cal., Oct. B.—Two Canadian officers were expected to arrive here today by plane to question Harold Vermilyea, 49, in connection with the axe-murder of his wealthy mother, Mrs. Nathaniel Vermilyea of Belleville, Ontario. Vermilyea was arested at his home while engaged in a long distance telephone conversation with the Canadian town. He denied he had been outside of California in eleven years, declaring he last visited his mother in Belleville in 1923. Oil Attendant Held Up James Parks, 33, of 2529 Indianapolis avenue, attendant at the Blue Point service station, Madison avenut and Ray street, w’as robbed of S2O early today by two Negroes, one armed with a revolver, he reported to police.

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Court Asked to Prevent Motherhood for Girl, 12 Operation Necessary, Doctors Say, But Refuse to Take Responsibility for Death.

By United Prcs DENVER, Colo.. Oct. B—Doctors and city authorities debated responsibility today with the life of a 12-year-old girl who is an expectant mother, at stake. Physicians declare an operation is necessary, but are unwilling to accept responsibility should th’e child die. Authorities profess to be unable to suspend the law. The district attorney's office pointed to the criminal statutes of the state, wmch read: (Persons shall be punished for performing such an operation* . . . "Unless it appear that such (operation! was procured or attempted by or under advice of a physician or surgeon with intent to save the life of such woman or to prevent serious and permanent bodily injury to her.”

Physicians' to protect themselves. asked for a court order to permit the operation. The district attorney's office referred them to the juvenile court and the juvenile court in turn would not shoulder the decision. ana THE girl, whose name can not be revealed because of a Coloj rado statutory provision, first was : taken to the Denver general hos- | pital by her mother following ex- : animation by a physician who di- | agnosed the child's condition as pregnancy. Hospital authorities agreed with the mother that an operation should be performed, but demurred because of the legal responsibility and referred her to the district attorney's office. That office pointed out that according to Colorado law they had no authority to approve or disapprove such a course. The courts brought the man who is alleged to be responsible for the condition of the expectant girl mother, John W. Brewer, 38, to trial last Friday and found him guilty of a statutory offense. He faces a possible life term in the state penitentiary. The jury deliberated but eight minutes and took only one ballot in determining Brewer’s guilt, it was understood. Judge Charles C. Sackman, who presided at the trial, allowed time for filing a motion for anew trial. In the event this motion is denied, Judge Sackman will pass sentence, which can be from three years to a life term in the penitentiary. a a a THE 12-year-old girl, her feet barely touching the floor and of a slender build, was the chief state’s witness. She testified she had known Brewer, who once was engaged to marry her mother, for three years. About a year ago, she said, she stopped at his home to invite him to her home for Sunday dinner. The call was made at her mother’s instruction, she said. She told the court that she made several such calls and, on one of these occasions. Brewer assaulted her. The same thing occurred ten times thereafter, she said. William A. Black, deputy district attorney, asked the girl if she didn’t “know what was wrong?” She replied that she “didn’t know, the first time, whether it was wrong or not.” Later, she said, Brewer told her that she would be sent to a reform school if any one ever found out „what had occurred. She told the court she was in the seventh grade in junior high school and testified she expected to become a mother in three months. INDUSTRY JOINS IN CITY HOUSING DRIVE Manufacturers to Attend Session Thursday. Large industry is bending its efforts toward assuring success for the federal housing administration's repair and modernization piogram, it was revealed today by officials of the housing bureau of the Chamber of Commerce. . Women’s organizations, churches, luncheon clubs, business and civic leaders, trade unions, doctors and lawyers already have pledged their support and addition of industry leaves virtually no field not lending aid to the movement, the chamber officials say. A huge industrial meeting, to be participated in by every manufacturer in the Indianapolis district, is scheduled for Thursday at the Claypool. Meetings will be held both in the morning and afternoon.

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MODERN EDUCATOR

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Indiana teachers will hear one of the nation's most modern educators when Dr. George S. Counts, of Teachers college, Columbia university, speaks at 2 p. m., Oct. 19, at the meeting of the Indiana State Teachers Association in Cadle tabernacle. "Education ana the New Era” will be his subject.

CATHOLICS OPEN RELIEFJ’ARLEY Apostolic Delegate Attends Gincinnati; Conference on Charity. By United Preen CINCINNATI, 0., Oct. £.—With the Roman Catholic church represented by the apostolic deleg ite to the United States—the Most Reverend Amleto Giovanni Cicognami—and the laity represented by such prominent members as former Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York, Catholics today studied means of giving charity to the needy. The National Conference of Catholic Charities was opened here Sunday with a parade of 45,000. Former Governor Smith and the Very Rev. Monsignor P. Marcellus Wagner, president of the national conference, pleaded for ultimate realization of social justice, vibrant and warm,’and based on universal precepts of charity and mutual responsibility. Committees on families, protective care, and social and economic problems met today and a general meeting is scheduled for tonight. Mission Sunday Set Mission Sunday will be observed Sunday by Catholic churches here and throughout the United States. Congregations In all churches of the Indianapolis diocese were told yesterday of the special services by the Right Rev. Monsignor F. A. Roell, Richmond, diocesan mission chairman, assisted by the Rev. Leonard Wemsing and the Rev. Finton G. Walker, Indianapolis. Sunday there also will be special broadcasts over the National Broadcasting Company network, and Pope Pius XI will be heard from the Vatican Wednesday. Kalletta Joins Mother By United Preen MANILA, P. I„ Oct. B.—Still without luggage, Kalletta Mulvihill Green, madcap Pittsburgh girl, today completed a voyage half way around the world to join her mother, Mrs. Rosalie Mulvihill.

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RENTALS HERE SHOW INCREASE, MOOREJSSERTS Realtors’ Secretary Points to Rise as Harbinger of Better Times. The fall renting season has shown a definite increase of 5 to 10 per rent in residential rents here, Frank L. Moore, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, announced today. The increased rentals noted in Indianapolis also have been reported very generally throughout the country, according to a survey made by the National Association of Real Estate Boards. Although this may be bad news to the family budget, the association points out that it is a definite indication of economic recovery, since construction operations can not get into swing until the earning power of existing buildings is seen to have overtaken the construction costs expected for new buildings. PONZI OFF FOR ROME: LEAVES WIFE AT DOCK Loyal Male Will Try to Raise SSOO to Join Deported Swindler. By United Preen BOSTON, Oct. B.—Rose Ponzi, loyal wife of Charles Ponzi. the swindler, undertook to raise SSOO today so she might join her husband in Rome. Ponzi was deported yesterday as an undesirable alien. He sailed on the motorship Vulcania with twentyfive other deportees. Departure of the erstwhile wizard who stripped Americas gullible of millions was dramatic and tearful. Ponzi was paroled last February after serving nearly twelve years for his fantastic frauds. HOSPITAL TO PRESENT BABY CARE PICTURES Mothers, Expectant Mothers and Visitors Are Invited. Care of infants and mothers will be shown in a moving picture, “Around the Clock With You and Your Baby,” which will be shown every afternoon at 3, beginning today, in the photographic department of Methodist hospital. Mothers, expectant mothers and visitors to the hospital have been invited to the showings. Tea will be served and guests will hold discussions. The picture has been approved by the hospital medical staff and ha3 for its star a month-old baby. FERA ORCHESTRA-BAND TO PLAY WEDNESDAY, P.-T. A. Meeting to Be Scene of Organization's Concert. First concert of the newly organized Marion county federal emergency relief association band and orchestra, sponsored by the police safety division, will be at the par-ent-teacher meeting in School 32 at 3 Wednesday. More than fifty persons on county relief rolls are enrolled. Rehearsals are held at the Fountain Square theater and at fire headquarters, Alabama and New York streets. PLANE DASH IS FUTILE Coast Guard Fliers Lose Frantic Race With Death. By United Preen NEW YORK, Oct. B.—The frantio dash of coast guard aviators up the Atlantic coast with serum proved unavailing today when Charles Pierre, widely known hotel man, died from abdominal infection. The pilots, R. P. Deuel and W. P. Rindstor, left Miami, Fla., at 2:55 a. m., yesterday and arrived afc Newark airport less than twelve hours later. They were so exhausted it was an effort to stand or speak. Baseball Fan Drops Dead By United Preen WHITEFORD CENTER, Mich., Oct. B.—Oct. 8 —An attack of heart desease induced by excitement of listening to a world series baseball broadcast was fatal for John Wis--1 naur, 66, yesterday.

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