Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 200, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1935 — Page 5

OCT. 30,1035

WALKED OUT ON GUESTS. WIFE'S DIVORCE CHARGE Mrs. Helen Schlosser Files 1 Suit. Asks Custody of Two Children. Disappearing when the - had guests and returning homt in an intoxicated condition with his face cut and bruir and, were charges I yesterday of Mrs. Helen Schlosser. 4519 Guilford-av, as she sought a divorce in Superior Court One from Chauncev G. Schlosser. Attorneys for Mr. Schlosser entered a general denial of the charges. The trial was continued indefinitely today by Judge Joseph T. Markey to await arrangement for a property settlement. Mr. Schlosser lives, in Asheville, N. C. A tentative projrerty settlement, awaiting approval of Mr. Schlosser, is S2O weekly for the care of two i children, and deeding of the home and stock in a business firm to Mrs. I Schlosser. Intoxication Is Charged Mrs. Schlosser charged that on Memorial Day, 193.1. Mr. Schlosser disappeared from the Indianapolis) Speedway while they were entertaining friends. William J. Robinson, automobile dealer. 340 E. Maple-rd, testified that Mr. Schlosser told him that he j had an argument with a Speedway I guard and that he was struck by j the guard. Mrs. Schlosser also testified that i husband was intoxicated “five j nights a week, at least, over a i couple of years time.” The couple married Aug. 20, 1921, | and separated June 1, 1933. Mrs. Schlosser seeks custody of the two children, Joan, 11, and Jane, 9. HAPGOOD TO ADDRESS VINCENNES WPA UNION Meeting Expected to Adopt Protest! Against Arrest of President. By United Press VINCENNES. Tnd , Oct. 30 Powers Hapgood, Indianapolis Sociali. t, will be the principal speaker at a rally of WPA workers here tomorrow. Workers on projects in the Vincennes district have become affiliated with the Workers’ Alliance, a state-wide relief workers’ union. Relief officials are reported to have threatened to close all work projects m Knox County unless union agitation is stopped. The meeting is expected to adopt a resolution protesting the arrest) of Homer Crust, Vincennes Alliance president, on a charge of assaulting a WPA foreman. JOHNSON TO SUPPORT ROOSEVELT IN 1936 General Will Slump for President if Asked, He Declares. By I tiit(<l VrrnH DETROIT, Oct. 30.—Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, first NRA administra- ] t<v, is to support President Roosevelt in the 1936 campaign, he said in a lecture here last night. "I will support the President and j take the stump for him if he asks,” Gen. Johnson said. He denied he had any personal political ambition. “As between the New Deal and Hooverism, ’ the fiery general said, “there is no choice for this country. The New Deal is a fact.”

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SPEAKERS TO BE HEARD BY BAPTIST YOUTH

H, A - pi

Ralph C. Ostergren

/ imes Speciul FRANKLIN, Ind.. Oct. 39.—Nationally known Baptist leaders, to appear here before the Indiana Youth Conference, Sunday, Nov. 10, include the Rev. Theodore Adams, Toledo; Ralph C. Ostergren, Weirton, W. Va., and Rev. Engracio Alora, native Filipino. These speakers, in addition to Dr. James H. Franklin, Northern Baptist Convention president, are expected to attract more than 1500 delegates to one of the largest young people’s parleys in the church’s history. The conference, sponsored by the local First Baptist Church, is to be conducted at the Franklin College Chapel. CHURCH FOUNDING IN 1880 TO BE MARKED Immanuel Reformed Event Set for Sunday. The congregation of Immanuel Reformed Church, Prospect and S. New Jerscy-sts, will celebrate the fifty-fifth anniversary of its founding Sunday. The Rev. H. F. Weckmueller is pastor. At the morning service at 10 the Rev. H. L. V. Shinn. Toledo. 0., former minister, will preach the anniversary sermon. An informal reception for Mr. and Mrs. Shinn will be held at the church from 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon. The church was founded Nov. 4. 1880, and its first building completed the following year. The present edifice dates from 1894. In 1927. a $45,000 educational building was added. From a charter membership of 40, enrollment has grown to 521. Present and former members and friends of the church are invited to attend the service. KOKOMO MAN TO SPEAK Butler Sigma Delta Chi Chapter to Meet Friday Night. Ashton Gorton, editor, and Herbert Kenney, business manager of the Kokomo (Ind.) Sentinel, are to speak at the first professional meeting of the Butler University Sigma Delta Chi chapter Friday night at the Press Club. Both are Butler alumni. Pledging rites will be held for Fletcher Humphrey, John Galvin and Kenneth Golden.

The Rev. Theodore Adams

Wm Millllll

The Rev. Engracio Alora Museum Director to Lecture. Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Museum, will speak tonight at 8:15 on “Artists of a New World.” This is the first of a series of eight at the museum on native factors in American art.

To End Annoying | Cough, Mix This Recipe, at Home: | Big Saving! No Cooking! So Easy! \ Here is the famous old recipe which millions of housewives have found to he tiie most dependable means of breaking up winter coughs. It takes but a moment to prepare, and costs very little, but it positively has no equal for quick, lasting relief. From any druggist, get 2 l / 2 ounces of Pines. Pour this into a pint bottle and till the bottle with granulated sugar syrup, made with 2 cups of sugar and one cup of water, stirred a I few moments until dissolved. No cook- | ixig needed—it’s so easy! Thus you i make a full pint of better remedy than j you could buy ready-made, and you | get four times as much for your money, j It never spoils and tastes fine. This home mixture soothes the irri- | tated throat membranes with surprisI ing ease. It loosens the phlegm and j eases the soreness in a way that is really astonishing. Pinex is a concentrated compound of | Norway Pine, famous for its effect in J stopping coughs quickly. Money rei funded if it doesn’t please you in every way,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

N, Y. POLICE TO WAR ON GANGS 19.000 Offered Promotions to Arrest, ‘Muss Up’ Racketeers. Bu United Press NEW YORK. Oct. 30.—Nineteen thousand policemen went to the wars today with promises of promotion for tne men who lay hands on and “muss up” such hitherto immune persons as John Boss) Torrio. Charlies (Lucky) Luciana and Charles (Bugs) Spiegel. Police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine and Mayor Fiorelio H. La Guardia hoped an order to arrest and beat up all the city's gang leaders on sight would put an end to an underworld war that has taken five lives in three weeks The Mayor stepped actively into investigation of the five slayings when reports leaked out that books and check stubs of gang leaders Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flegenheimer and Louis (Pretty) Amberg. showed they had enjoyed powerful political connections. He conferred with Chief Valentine two hours and the commissioner met immediately afterward with his subordinates. “Every policeman in the city knows he is expected not only to bring in these men,” Valentine said, “but to muss them up. There are promotions waiting for the men that do it.” He said he particularly wanted his order executed on Torrio, Luciana and Spiegel, because they are reputed to have succeeded Schultz and Amberg in control of policy and usury rackets.

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ADMITS SLAYING

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The luck that brought a $40,000 sweepstakes prize to Roiland B. Steele of Eutaw, Ala., led him on to his death when he celebrated his good fortune. Elva Cross, 22-year-old Oklahoma girl of Indian descent, confessed to New Orleans police that she fatally stabbed Steele when he attacked a bartender in the night club where she was hostess. She is pictured after her arrest. LIQUOR DEALERS MEET Discuss Better Business Methods Among Local Group. Better business relations among liquor dealers were discussed at a meeting of the Indianapolis Retail Liquor Dealers Association last night at the Claypool. Agents of several wholesale liquor firms met with the group. George T. O’Connor presided.

TRAINS STRIKE CARsJTWO HURT Auto Bumped by Freight Into Path of Second at Oaklandon. When their car was bumped by one train into the path of another last night at the Oaklandon crossing of the New Yorx Central Ranroad, Miss Georgia Jackson. 24. was injured critically, and her mother. Mrs. Bertha Jackson, was injured seriously. South-bound over the Main-st crossing, the Jackson car was jolted by a west-bound freight train into the path of an east-bound freight. The car was dragged several hundred feet and Mrs. Jackson was found in the wreckage. Miss Jackson was thrown against a pile of new steel rails. Both victims, who live two and a half miles northwest of Oaklandon and who were en route to a P.-T. A. meeting at Oaklandon High School, were taken to Methodist Hospital. SIX NATIONAL GUARD DELEGATES FLY HOME Pilots Participate in Formation at Convention in New Mexico. The Indiana delegation of six to the National Guard convention at Santa Fe, N. M„ flew back to Stout Field yesterday. Pilots were Maj. Oliver H. Stout, Capt. Guy Gail and Lieut. Howard Maxwell. With them were Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall. Col. F. L. Gray and Sergt. Aaron Vance. The Indiana pilots participated in flight formation with 35 other planes at the convention.

MILK-SOAKED SPONGE IS GIVEN ORANG-UTAN Zoo Attendants Hope Nancy Will Spray Baby With Food. By United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 30—Attendants at Lincoln Park Zoo today tossed a sponge into the cage of Nancy, muscular orang-utan, not as a signal of defeat in their campaign to get their hands on her 8-day-old son, but as anew strategem in the cattle to save his life. The sponge was soaked with milk and attendants hope that Nancy in a playful moment will seize it. spray her offspring with the fluid and sus-

A< y jS| which to start your "HalvltAw H loween” gayeties. Save - a ■ time . . dress in costume, lE** C iffwjP H then have dinner at Seville. EXTRAS I Special Halloween tuTt count I Ton ne Dinner , 50c , W MUCH j | HUM

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tain an existence that thus far has been precarious. Nancy’s son has existed under mouth to mouth injections of milk she gulps from a pan placed in the cage and hopes were high today for the baby's survival. NAME PARTY CHAIRMAN State Senator Wiekens Heads Decatur County Democrats. By United Pr, *s GREENSBURG. Ind , Oct. 30. State Senator Hubert E. Wiekens, Greensbure, has been named Decatur County Democratic chairman, succeeding Mel M. Carter, resigned. Mr. Wiekens is joint Senator from Decatur. Bartholomew. Franklin and Union Counties.