Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1938 — Page 3

UN ERR

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12, 1938

BREMEN PUPILS SROKE’ AFTER TRIP TO MIAMI

Missing Children ‘Made ‘No Attempt to Marry on Drive South.

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Jan. 12 (U. P.) —Edwina Keyser, 13, and Lowell Mast, 14, eighth-grade students who disappeared Friday from their

homes in Bremen, Ind., arrived here [iid

today, without funds, and were turned over to juvenile authorities. The boy and girl, sweethearts since they were in the fifth grade, and who were believed by their par-

ents to have eloped, made no at-|

tempt to get married, they told officers. They said they feared no state through which they drove would allow them to marry, so they made no effort to obtain a license. They said they planned their trip several days in advance. They left Bremen in the car belonging to the girl's parents, with only $6.50 in cash. Fed Two Hitchhikers

As they ran short of money they sold the car's radio for $5, then the car's horn for $3.50, and finally disposed of the seat covers, the spare tire and the girl's overnight bag for an aggregate of $6.50, In Georgia, they gave a ride to a man and a woman. The hitchhikers were without funds, so the young couple paid for their food from their

scanty funds. They brought the hitchhikers here. Police found the sweethearts

asleep in the car, parked near the beach, a few hours after they arrived “I wouldn't blame our parents if they were angry with us,” the boy told police.

Parents to Go to

Miami for Children

BREMEN, Jan. 12 (U. P.).—The parents of Lowell Mast, 14, and Edwina Keyser, 13, eighth grade pupils who disappeared from home last Friday, were to leave this afternoon for Miami Beach, Fla. “I'm so happy.” Mrs, Keyser laughed joyously, “to know that Ed-

Times Photo.

This is part of the wreckage of the automobile in which the Rev,

their deaths vesterdav afternoon. n » ”

William H. Todd and his wife, Irene, of University Heights, rode to

# » ”

Automobile Bursts Into Flames;

County Toll Now 10 Over 1937

(Continued from Page One)

struck by an automobile last night in 900 block E. Washington St. Leslie H. Crockett, 41, of 602 Carye Place, driver of the car, was arrested for having improper license | plates and no certificate of title. | Police said he stopped his car within

Mrs. Gant, a lifelong Indianapolis resident, was the widow of Jesse O. Gant, poultry dealer, He died four years ago. She was a Fletcher Place Methodist Church member. Survivors include two sons, Amos and Haven, and two daughters, Mrs, Emma Harmon and Mrs. Melba Stephenson, all of Indianapolis. The Rev. Mr. Todd and his wife were killed instantly yesterday aft-

wina has been found Wilbur Mast, Lowell's father, was not available immediately for comment

TENTATIVE JURY FOR JONES TRIAL CHOSEN

State Expected to Start] Arguments Today.

By SAM TYNDALL

ernoon when their auto was struck by an inbound Pennsylvania Railroad train ‘at the Lawrence Ave, crossing in University Heights. The Rev. Mr. Todd and his wife were driving east in Lawrence St, as the train approached the crossing, due at the Union Depot from Louisville at 3:10 p. m. The crossing has only warning signs. William Pritchard, Logansport, engineer, and L. J. Adams, Jefferville, said they saw the car ap-

but ‘were unable to avoid the crash. Bursts Into Flames As the engine struck the car

Times Special Writer

DANVILLE, Jan. 12.—A tentative | jury of 11 farmers and a business | man to try Mrs. Etta Jones, accused | of slaying 13-year-old Helen Schuler in Beech Grove, Indianapolis, last July, had been accepted by the State today. Following a hoon recess, Deputy Prosecutor John Kelly of Marion County was to open arguments for the State before Judge Edgar A. Rice, if the jury proved acceptable, Mrs. Jones Thinner Mrs. Jones, slightly thinner than when arrested in Indianapolis five

months ago, sat expressionless with her chin in her hand and watched

broadside, the latter burst into flames. The auto was ripped in two parts. The first was hurled 48 vards from the crossing and the other a shorter distance, The occupants were hurled from the car and Mrs. Todd's clothing was ignited. Firemen extinguished the flames. The engineer brought the train to a stop within about 100 feet from the crossing. It was the first accident ‘at the site in 15 years, neighbors said. An investigation was started by police, Coroner E. R. Wilson and railroad officials.

pastor of a Terre Haute Church and came here in September, 1936.

her attorney, Miss Bess Robbins, challenge veniremen { The indictment against the 38-vear-old rooming house operator

charges murder in the first-degree. Helen was found dying ‘with a bullet wound in her head on the floor of her hedroom in the Schuler Beech Grove home, July 14. Mrs. Lottie Schuler, the dead child's stepmother and Mrs. Jones have accused each other. No motive has been disclosed. Mr. Spencer said the State will present no motive, but that evidence will establish that the girl died of bullet wounds inflicted by a gun owned and carried to the scene of the crime by Mrs. Jones

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here's County Traffic Record

i $ Deaths luncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon i : (To Date) Qil Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin, noon. 12! Construction League of Indianapolis, 1998. a + 47 | luncheon, “Architects “and “Builders “Bldg., ~ o | NOON. 1937 ......... 2] Indiana Lumber and Ruildets’ SupnlyDeaths in City [ine ne state convention, Claypool Hotel, all ay. FAIS out 71 ine Paper Credit Group, luncheon. F937 aii 2 men's “grille, the William H. Block Co, | ® | moon. RETA MARRIAGE LICENSES Jan. (These tists ‘are from official records Accidents ... 10 in the County Court House, The Times, Injured ...... | ‘therefore, Is not responsible for errors in Dead ......... 2 [dames or ‘addresses. Clarence N. Hutchings, 42, of 758 LexArrests ingtan Ave.. Ella Mae Eastridge, 28, of 1116 N, Capitol Ave. (Jan, 11) wre ovo C, Oe a do %¥ viremia ve.. eorgia uth addell, 40, { 29 Speeding, Virginia. Ave, . 12 aidate, White, 3. 2 833 Indiaga Ave. ys. Hill, , 01 2457 Sheldo ts Reckless Driving | Durward, Leroy, Power, 32. bt 362 WW 3 Ray S&.; Doris Alice Dairs, 21, of 1226 N,. Mount, St, | Runnirg ‘Prefer- | Ernest A. Weaver, 3, of 510 E 10th ential Street ATA) Pearl Riggle, 28, of 1118 Temsen ot. A Harty L., Griswold, 22, of 719 E. 25th \ St.; Mary Louise Wimsett, 22, ‘of 2530 Running Red | Park Ave. Light 4 BIRTHS Drunken Driv- Bots ing, 1 Sononald. Fudah Simons Bloomington, at pleman, Others +P. Mary Walsh, at St. Vincent's, 13 Robert, Robyn Galloway. at St. Vine cent’s. der apd Golbert, Daisy Robbins, at Methodist, MEETINGS TODAY CarlzRuth G. Burt, at Methodist. Roy, ima Abney. at City. Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Com- Edgar, Alice Massey, at C

we. luncheon, Canary Cottage, noon. mM naianapolis T.eagne of Women Vaters, lecture, Caleb Mills auditorium, 8 p.m. Lions Chub, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

noon. \ . A Indianapolis ‘Apartment Owners’ Asso tation, Cheon, Hotel Washington, noon. India Lumber an uilde Supply - men, state convention, Claypdol Hotei, all

Sak Twants Chub, luncheon, Columbia Club,

naon

Beverage Credit Grown, Tuncheon, Mox's

Te Sune Mens DIstussion Club, dinner, Yopurdae Arm Mesos ton, Mncheon, Hohn istrict ARekiean ‘Totton, Tineneon, Bean Alpha Frefion, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon.

Indianapolis Real Fstate Woard, lunch-

a. Hotel Washington, noon, “2 Public “Health Rha shog Wssoetation, Hotel, noon

T heon, Claypool x avert ng Gun of Tndianapols, Tunch-

s 5) mba Club, noon. ! TA Tuneheon, Board of "Trade, © Ameigan Wishes Yad, Yunchesn, ‘Co-

1 Dla, NG ) Reon. \be " ER TR

%

Survivors Listed

They are survived by four daugh- | ters, Mrs, Russell Lord, Indianapo(lis; Miss Helen and Miss Ruth, both [ Indiana Central ‘College students, and Miss Gertrude, Manual Training High “School pupil, and three sous, Ross, Marshall ‘and Joseph. Mr. Todd also is survived hy his | parents, Mr. ‘and Mrs. L. S. Toda, | Jasonville; four brothers, the Rev. | Joseph Todd, Worcester, Mass.: the (Rey. 'C. 'T. Todd, Rockford, Ill.; J. | E. Todd, Clay City, and Red Todd, | Jackson, Miss.; two sisters, Mrs. | Elizabeth Schroder, Central, Mrs. Mary Reynolds, Richmond. Mrs. Todd is survived by three

| Caravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple, | | noon.

Indiana Motor Traffic

ity, Earl, Agnes Dickinson, at 1210, Hoefgen. Harold, Mirfam Brown at 2233 Roose-

velt. Havard, Gladys Bluestein, ‘at 805 N. Cagiornia. iliam, Eileen Apple, ‘at 925 St. Peter. Girls

Louis, Mabel Southerland. at Coleman. ahr. ‘at St. Vincent's. ha Dorothy Ro le, at St. Francis dwin, MilQred olmes, at Methodist, { 3 Ma ubanks, at City, Edo, Catherine Wells at 222 E. Wyom-

DEATHS

Francis E. 92,

chronic. myo ARS Cc 3 Ss John H. Fills, 81 coronary

at 224 WwW. 20th,

Central Indiana, oSlusion. ishburn. 8 ‘months, ‘at 533 Mar-

pneumonia. iley, 73, ‘at ‘Ci

at

. nephritis

mia M, SchoenBachier 1130 Madison SRreoms, Alice Jean Cooney, 2 ‘at Su. 'Vifetnt's,

mastosaitis fal Martin. ‘87. ‘at ‘Methodist,

62, “at

Jerome Sa teneral $oiitonitls. 9 VOry | orthy, 56, ‘at Central diana,

Jame , 76, ‘at ‘1893 ‘Ruekle,

15 feet after the woman was struck, |

The Rev. Mr. Todd formerly was |

Louis ‘G. Caylor, ‘42, ‘at City. tuberculous ritis

sisters, Mrs. Ida D. Wood, Indianapolis; Mrs, Rome Norick, Oakland City, and Mrs. Rose Reed, AKron,

viile, Ky., and Melvin Ross, Oakland City. | Services to Be Friday Double funeral services are to be held at 10 a. m. Friday at the Uni-

versity Heights United Brethren Church and at 2:30 p. m. at the First United Brethren Church,

Terre Haute, Burials are to be in Roselawn there. { . Henry Stribby, 58, ‘of 633 N.

| Hamilton Ave. was reported in erit[ical condition at St. Francis Hos[pital with a possible skull fracture. | ®olice said Mr. Stribby ‘and his wife, | Ida, were struck by an automobile [last night at Hamilton Ave. ‘and | 10th St. She was treated for minor |injuries. The driver was not held, Mayor Boetener declared that seve | eral new motorcycles would be addad to the traffic patrol within the | next few weeks. The patrol now in- | aes 26 cycles.

Driver Killed as Car Leaves Road, Hits Barn

| ‘WASHINGTON, Ind, Jan. 12 (U. proaching ‘and sounded the whistle, | P.).—Leo P, Grannan, 25, was killed

today when the automobile in which he was riding went off the highway, crashed through a barn, and ‘went [into a ditch. "Charles Walsh, 22, | who was riding with Grannan, re{ceived a broken leg.

WITNESSES TESTIFY

Three pupils from the Indiana State School for the Deaf today used sign language when called to

the Criminal Court witness stand to describe the fatal accident in which one of their instructors was killed. They were the only ‘withesses cdlled by the State as it presented its case against Trenna Edgerton, 26, truck driver, accused of involuntary manslaughter and failure to stop after striking and killing Louis [Gordon Hirschy, Oct. 26. Another instructor from the school interpreted the witnesses’ | signs to the Court and jury. They (told of the fatal atcident while a [Boy Scout troop from the school | was returning from ‘a picnic in | Washington Park.

{ — a — EX-CONGRESSMAN DIES | WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U.P) —

O.; two brothers, Elijah Ross, Louis- |

|

JAP POLICY IN CHINA DRIVE

Peace Hopes Rumored; Enemy Masses Army in Suchow Area.

(Continued from Page One)

centers of industry and population and return. Aware of all this, Japan is uneasy. That is what is behind the almost daily reports that China can now have peace on surprisingly mild terms. These terms, it is indicated, include the autonomy of the five northern provinces contiguous to Manchukuo; the demilitarization of most of the coast, especially around

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Shanghai; a formal undertaking on the part of China ta stamp out all jy anti-Japanese activities; the em- [3 ployment of Japanese as “advisers” in key positions and, in general, a disposition to lean on Nippon in the future instead of looking to Occidentals. The indications are that Gen, Chiang-Kai-shek will refuse peace on any such terms, Japan can hardly demand less without loss of] “face.” It looks as if Gen. Chiang will ‘keep on fighting.

Nippon's Policy May Be Known Friday TOKYO, Jan. 12 (U. P).—Japanese leaders, as the result of an Imperial Conference, are completing a program of diplomatic and military action which may include a final effort to effect a peace agreement with China, it was announced today.

PLANS PUSHED

Program Would Establish

Federal Tribunals.

ratification of subsequent constitutional amendments by popular vote in general elections.

Sees No Opposition

Senator Norris (Ind. Nebh.), dean of Senate progressives, said today that no opposition has been indi-

The statement of ‘policy may be gated. made Friday. Nn Advocates of the amendment beThere seemed to be guarded hints | jjave it would do what the Presi-

that the Government still believed

dent aimed at in his court plan— there was a chance of peace.

IN SIGN LANGUAGE

make the Constitution a more flex-

each house of Congress vote to submit any amendment. The number of ratifying states necessary would be reduced from three-fourths, or 36, to twothirds, or 32. A majority vote in each state would be required.

two-thirds of

Great Air Fleet

LONDON, Jan. 12—Within one year Great Britain expects to have a fleet of 10,000 military airplanes, it was asserted today on high authority—more than equal to the

=. sombined aid strength of Italy, Ger- |} man yand Japan on the basis of | Amendments Seen

available estimates. [AS ili : This information was given today | As Filibuster Aid as the Army in the second big | WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U. P.).— shakeup within six weeks named Six [‘Wilibustering Senators promised om ors of the younger school to key | barrage of amendments today in a posts in the high command at the | expense of older men. ew maneuver to kill the Wagner=-

es VanNuys Antilynching Bill. Suchow Battle One ‘attack disclosed by foes of

i the bill proposed the offering of Ey Dl War amendments broadening the scope

Jan. ( Y= er i : China's Armv Yeats, fe itukig | Of the bill in an effort to make it everything they have on a defense | OPNOXIOUs to many Senators, Sen- " ‘ator Russell (D. Ga.) said he was of the Suchow area north of Nan-| : Sa king, according to information te- | Proposing to make the penalties of ceived today by foreign military ‘ex- | the bill “apply specifically to “gang ports : y [' murders. It ‘Was ‘estitated ‘here ‘at ‘one, Other proposed amendments were million ‘Chinese ‘Soldiers had been | designed to arouse fresh debate and massed in the ‘area to meet an | Aid the time-consuming tactics of attack by 500/000 Japanese ‘moving | the filibuster ‘group. on the ‘area in four separate] 5 columns. % Roosevelt May Back Foreign experts believe that if the | : Japanese smashed the Chinese army Short Wage-Hour Bill on that front reorganization of the | rims special Chinese army would be impossible. WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—PreslChinese reported from Hankow | gent Roosevelt may support a simthat Chinese airplanes had sunk |pjifieq ‘wage-hour bill of only three pages to replace the elaborate 55-

two “or four Japanese warships which sailed in the Yangtse from | page measure turned down by the House last month, it was learned to-

{ |

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Wuhu, above Nanking. day

Loyalists ‘Gain In Teruel Battle

drafting a new bill.

today to start measure would have

That a short

. Administration favor was HENDAYE, French-Spanish Fron- by Rep. Glenn ‘Griswold (D. hd),

tier, Jan. 12 (U. P).—A Spanish oy, distrssed the whole ‘subject rebel communique issued from Sala- "with the President yesterday. manca was believed today to confirm | «1 sannot speak for the Loyalist ‘assertions that their troops | gent of “courte.” Mr

Presi-

around Teruel. The Loyalist Government also said | that the 3,730-ton Dutch steamer

satisfactory from my viewpoint.”

| Former Rep. James G. Strong of | Hannah had been torpedoed and | EXpect Expenditures

Kansas, ‘assistant treasurer of the | Sunk by ‘an unidentified submarine | Home ‘Owners Loan Corporation, Off the eastern Spanish coast. and | died here late last night ‘after ‘an|

August. He was UJ, S.-ltaly - ‘Pact Threatened

| illness ‘since last 67.

Charles Walter Horn, 59 ‘at 2222 N. | Drexel, coronary seclusion

Association, |

| OFFICIAL ‘WEATHER

. United States Weather Bureau wl

INDIANAPOLIS TORECAST: Partly cloudy and colder tonight. lowest between

|

To ‘Exceed Budget

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U. P).— Growing belief that larger appropriations ‘will be denied for national defense, agriculture and relief gave I'strong indications today that the ROME, Jan. 12 (U. P).—Premier |"maderal ‘government ‘will be forced Benito Mussolini's insistence that | to spend at least '$350.000,000 more [King Victor Emmanuel be recog- in ‘the next fiscal year than was nized as “Emperor of Ethiopia’ may | foracast in the annual budget mes- | prove an obstacle to final conclu- gage. | sion of a United States-Italian| ‘president Roosevelt estimated Tast | commercial treaty, Italian ‘and ‘week that expenditures, exclusive of | American officials admitted today, debt ‘retirement, for the vear end- | _ Repors that negotiations already | ing June 30, 1939, Would total $6.869,- | had collapsed because of the insist- | 043000. ence on recognition ‘of Italy's conquest of Ethiopia ‘were denied.

Trade

FALL RELIEF LOND

30 and 35 degrees; fair tomorrow, | | _Sunrite 1006 | Sunset . : ih Japan to Halt 1 SHOWS 10.000 GAIN TEMPERATURE po Shinhi Ee : —Jan. 12, 193%— Yangtze Shipping Approximately 10.000 more relief Ya Wm. By Yl, Wp ooo Hig LONDON, ‘Jan. 12 (U. 'P) — | cases were recorded in Indiana dur- ~ TSAROMETER —= "British Naval authorities in Shang-{ ing November than in August, the Tn. Byly [hai have been notifisd that Japan | Government's ‘Commission oh UmPr RNa Thal — [No longer can permit the passage | employment Relief announced today, Piscinitation 241s. ‘enaimg 7%, Wn, ol | of merchant ships other than Jap- | The increase was ‘due to govern- | Deficiency 11s ['aneSe ‘up the Yangtse River, the | mental retrenchment and an early, MIDWEST WEATHPR Admiralty reported today. [‘severe ‘winter, the commission said.

Indiana—~Cloudy to partly cloudy ‘and

| portion; ‘generally

Ilinols—Cloudy to partly cloudy and colder tonight; tomorrow generally fair. Lower Michigan Snow probably tonight and tomorrow. somewhat colder tomtg and east portion tomorrow. ar

Ohio—Snow flurries ‘and colder

fair tomorrow.

: tonight; thmorrow soni excent Snow Parting in $ rtion, slightly Li dy ghtly colder 'n east

Kentucky—Generall ir y fair ‘and colder, exfonighe: Lomarise n extreme east Sotion i orrow fair. y Ast BHI r. slightly colder in

WEATHER IN OTHER OFFTes AT

Gat TAM. om h Amarillo, Tex,, ... Naa 0.40 ka Bismarck, N. D. ... Clear 0.20 8 SA a Clear 0.10 10 po cago J Snow 9.60 32 ineinnati «ea Cloudy 29.78 38 leveland ‘...... .oSnow 9,72 34 enver & «Clear 0,40 0 odge “City. Kas. ... Cloudy 30.34 6 Helena, Mont, ....Cloudy 30,22 4 Jacksonville, Fla. '.. Cloudy 30.04 i Kansas City, Mo. ... Cloudy 30.08 0 Little Rock, "Ark. .. Clear 3008 8 Los Angeles ........ Clear nos 80 Miathi, Fla. o.oo 8 Clear 0.06 66 Minneapolis ........ Snow 9.88 0 Mobil TL TENN Cloudy 30,02 4 ew JOrleans ....... ain 0,02 56 SW COLE vadig Teg loudy 30.08 0 Okla. No A Okla ioudy 30,24 6 Omaha, Neb Snow 30,00 14 {LE ShuFEh Prcldy 20i8¢ 28 ortland, Ore, Rain 29.86 46 San Antonio, Tex .. Clear 3004 52 En raneciseto Clear 30.08 44 a Louis Clovdy 29.92 2 wong, a. ... Rain 0.04 1) ashingtons D.C. .. Cloudy 3004 34

% WATCH REPAIR P om Service on Guaranterd atch and Clock Repairing

GUS MEISTER #04 - . st ‘Widg.

St.

colder tonight, snow flurries extreme north |

The Japanese ‘authorities stressed | Average relict per family in Septhe "danger of ‘Chinese ‘mine-laying | témber ‘was $1535 for townships in operations. the state.

a

‘BRANDT IS RE-ELECTED The Works Board today re-elected | Louis Brandt, prasident, for ‘another | one-year term. ‘Other officers also | re-elected ‘were Robert Eby, vice president; Ernest Frick, secretary, | and Maurice Tenant, Sanitation || | Commission member.

TE

‘Rinses, also, th ‘soft ‘water

Ny

About CHAPPED LIPS Mo Thnrerflon serps |

Witter often means chapped lips—und if you dre bothered By ‘the ‘way ‘plain ‘Cigarettes wick 'to your lips=you'll ‘ehjoy ‘the TPereyton ‘Cork Tip. It ‘never Wicks ‘to ‘youir Tips. Wioreover, Tarevions have finer, ‘mildér tobacco.

HERBERT 15¢

Wow ONLY

YU like”

TAREYTON “Fhere

CIGARETTES § SOMETHING whorl When

EVISED COURT |

‘Business Office’ for |

(Continued from Page One)

L ible and more democratically reEngland to Build sponsive document. It would still be required that |

The House Labor Committee met |

indicated |

Griswold said. | had gained ground in the battle spy the conference was entirely |

ROGRES|

| ‘teeth listen and gleath ‘with all ‘their §

[808 BURNS Say: gemma

| When baseball started to git a little ragged, they got Judge Landis in| there to hold it together. The mov- | ing picture industry got Will Hays | for the same reason, and I don’t be- | lieve the Gov-| ernment will] ever balance their budget until they git some- | in ‘there to| ————o—T— — wath the de- cago. Legality of marriages pretails of the viously contracted by persons not spending. | fiving ih Lake County was not My ncle| 3 Skinny Flint] questioned. would be a good Legislatures Power Upheld man for the job. | In ‘a strongly worded opinion writ- | One time, down I Ra [ten ‘by Judge James P. Hughes, the Tweedle got up in church and sald |. : “Brothers and sisters, there's a fam- | Supreme Court declared: | ily south of town that has been left | | destitute by the floods. 1 suggest th [we send them a barrel of flour, a lyi4y ‘and ‘woman.

Brides Must ‘Live in County Where License fs fssued, State Court Rules.

(Continued from Page One)

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PAGE 3

Reports Finding Wreckage of Clipper

Queen High

7 Lovely Ladies Lead To New Deal With No Passes,

OUR Anderson men returned to their homes today, minus $160 and their deck of cards and an Indianapolis man returned to his job with $7 which he had been without for several days. Jesse Craig got his $7 after tell. ing Judge Charles Karabell this story in Municipal Court: The men entered the barbecue

stand at 3748 Madison Ave. where he works, early on Jan. 5. One James H. Wallace started

showing him—with the cards—that

“The marriage relation is more | the eye was quicker than the hand.

an a personal relation between a status | men left he called the sheriff. Dep-

Craig won $1, then lost $7. As the

| barrel of potatoes, a barrel of salt | sounded on contract ‘and established | uty L. 'W. Roder captured them.

[‘and a barrel of pepper.” | Uncle Skinny jumped up and said, | “Hold on, Parson, you've got

darn much pepper.” (Copyright, 1938)

{by law. ¥t constitutes an institu-

| of society and is regulated and controlled by law based upon principles

of the people of the state. “Nor can there be any doubt that { the Legislature has full power to

0 N ) | prescribe reasonable regulations reIN KEROSENE BLAZE nie to marriage and to provide

punishment for those who solemoo | nize or contract marriage contrary

| fo statutory command.” In order to evade laws in neigh-

Roomer Killed in Explosion at boring ‘states, thousands of couples East Side Home.

| officials, civic ‘organizations

| (Continued from Page One) newspapers, Lake County Prosecutor

fhe kitchen floor. At his side, ‘at-|

| |

of public policy affecting the welfare |

Judge XKarabell examined the

| tion involving the highest interest | cards and then said to Mr. Craig:

“Ah, you fell for the ladies. There are seven queens in this deck.’ He ordered Mr. Craig's money reéturned, then gave these penaltids: Wallace, $25 and costs and 90 days (suspended) on the State Farm for

[ petit larceny; James L, Fitzpatrick,

['same charge, same fine, 30 days sus-

pended; Everett Thatcher, same charge as Fitzpatrick; Al Chambers, same charge, $25 and costs and 30 suspended days for petit larceny, $10 and costs for driving while drunk

'got licenses in northern Indiana fang ‘driver's license suspended for counties. Under fire from Chicago gy davs. ae | ooo

Fred A. Egan sought ‘to ‘enjoin [Of couples, during the last few County Clerk George W. Sweigart | months have been rushing to Lake

. 1 2 i 2 2 tempting to aid the suffering boy, | from issuance of licenses in violation | Gounty from Cook County, Iiinois,

bor i; ! » terrier, the | of the statute. was ‘a ‘black ‘and ‘white | An injunction was granted by the

family pet. | Lake County Circuit ‘Court ‘and Mr. William, left ‘alone in the blaz- | Sweigart appealed to the Supreme ing downstairs, unable to move Court. quickly ‘and ‘with his escape blocked | Injunction Affirmed \when the ‘door slammed shut be- The Supreme Court affirmed the hind Mary, had braved the flames a [injunction and said: second time to reach the kitchen.

It ‘was not known how he received | the broken Teg. ‘Crippled since birth, |

states.

at Riley Hospital. Capt. pany 11, ‘which answered the alarm, climbed a ladder to the porch roof |... By the very fact tha and “carried ‘out Maurice, who was | —————

and other states to avoid the mare

[riage regulations of the laws of

|

INlinois and other states shows econclusively the wisdom of the Indiana law.”

Prosecutor Egan secured his ine junction from Lake County Circuit

“The State of Indiana should not [Court Judge T. J. Sullivan in Noassist parties from other states to | vember, evade the laws ‘of their respective | Crown Point “Gretna Green,” where he had been undergoing treatment | Hh the past half century some of 1e_ha gong | “This 1s ‘precisely ‘what is dohe |

This ‘action closed the

the country’s most famous elope-

[when marriage licenses ‘are issued | ments have ended in marriage Ernest Hinchman of Com- [to parties from other states when | they come within our jurisdiction. [the Crown Point monthly toll fret thousands [quently ran as high as 4000 licenses,

Before the injunction was granted

took Mrs. Burke to safety. The blaze was confined to the dining room with a loss estimated at $100. First ajd to the injured was administered by the police emergency |

‘ving on a bed. Another fireman | Sug A //

ficiency —

squad in charge of Sergt. John Ambuhl. Mrs. Burke, William ‘and | Maurice were taken to the home of fa neighbor, Frank Riley, 41-8. Sum- [ mit “St.

Lijfficiency—

Dazed by Shock

As her two boys fay on ‘a sofa | crying with pain, Mrs. Burke rocked | in a chair, dazed. “I heard screaming and rushed |

«+++» and ECONOMY!

out to see what was the matter,” | ‘Mrs. Riley ‘said. “Mrs, Burke was | [on the roof screaming. Flames were | I'shooting out of the house.” | “Also awakened by the ‘screams, | Mrs, Catherine Sullivan, 368. 8um[mit St., ran out and took Mary into | {her home. | | 91 saw ‘Mrs. Burke on the ‘roof. | [Others in'my family called the Fire | Department and police. | “When I ‘picked Mary up, she | ‘seemed very calin in view of the | | fact that her house ‘was on fire ‘and | her brothers had been burned.” | “After the ‘fife ‘was out, a canary | | ‘was foun ‘dead in its cage in the | living room. It had suffocated. The | dog had been carried out uninjured. | Mr. Martin, a hative of ‘Germany, { had been employed at the M & H FGo-aberative Laundry three years. He | came to the United States when he was 17 and had been employed in the Taundry business most of the | time ‘since then. His “survivors live | [in ‘Gérmany, according to Dr. Noi- | man Booher, deputy coroner, ‘who | investigated. |

Moving Woori—to 37

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