Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1939 — Page 7

i

STOLE EX-WIFE * T0 REGAIN HER, PRISONER SAYS

® Ascaris Love but Second Husband Beats Him at Police Station. NORTHAMPTON, Mass. July 20

(U. P.) —James J. Kehoe, 1, an exconvict, abducted his div wife

"because he wanted to persuade her

to leave her present husband and return to him, he told police today. Nevertheless, police charged him with kidnaping, armed robbery, larceny and unlawful possession of a gun. He pleaded not ty today and was held in $11, bail for hearing July 28. Nor was his explanation acceptable to Cyril Beckwith, his former wife’s present husband. Beckwith struck the manacled prisoner with his fists when he saw him in the police station last night and wants

¥: “another chance” at him.

“I still love her,”

; “but I guess I made a mess of

things.” Woman Is Hysterical

. Kehoe and Mrs. Beckwith, 27, were found in a tourist cabin at Salem, 25 miles from here, last night 19 hours after Kehoe kidnaped her, her husband, and a second man from a street here. Beckwith and Leroy Langdon were re-

leased within an hour.

Mrs. Beckwith was hysterical. The ‘moment she saw her husband she ran to his arms. For 19 hours, Ke-

“hoe had used every means to per-

rin |

suade her to give him up, it was said. Mrs. Beckwith decided to divorce Kehoe when he was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to the reformatory for 18 months. The papers were served on him in prison. I Meant No Harm

“Right. then, I vowed I'd get her back if possible,” Kehoe said. “1 meant no harm.” He was released last month. “I came to Northampton twice and tried to see her,” he continued. “The first time she wouldn't talk with me, so I went away. I still love her very much and consider her my wife. I came back Tuesday and I guess I lost my head.” -

HE INSPECTS BILLIONS SAN FRANCISCO, July 20 (U.

.P.)—Russell J." Van Horne surely

has seen more money than any other man in the world. He is superintendent of the Federal Gold Depository at Ft. Knox, Ky. and once a year is obliged to come to San Francisco, ahd check up on the gold in the mint here. He has completed his local inspection ~

Kehoe said, :

Times Photo.

Col. A. c. Bocbueh, cofounder of Sears, Roebuck & Co., entertains children at the local store. Sitting on the desk is Jerry Woollen, 4004 E. 11th St., immediately left of the Colonel is Dorothy Jean Clarkson, 3219 Winthrop Ave., and at the right, Gail Marshall, 333 Leslie St. » » .

# » 2

Mail Order Executive

Works at Local Store

Col. A. C. Roebuck, cofounder of Sears, Roebuck & Co., came to Indiashapolis today to play midsummer Santa Claus for the children. No Santa Claus ever had a brighter twinkle in his eye. And none ever had a more winning way with children. And who would expect Santa Claus, in this kind of weather, to wear all those white bushes he

has at Christmas time? Col. Roebuck is 75 years old. He has a desk on a dias inside the door on the first floor at the store, 333 N. Alabama St., and the desk is crowded with toys he gives to the children. Sometimes as’ many as five or six will be crowded around at one time.

They Like His Jokes

He tells them jokes, which they like a good deal, and then gives them pistols, balloons and whistles which they like at least as much. But he has more serious conversations with adults who stop at his desk to pass the time of day. Col. Roebuck has for some time now been connected again with the company he Helped to found. In the interim between his connections with the company, he had had varied ex-

periences.

These experiences he describes as good, because “now I find I need very little artificial amusement.” He said he is extremely interested in the things that go on around him, what people say and how they act.

You From Lafayette?

A native Hoosier, he asks almost everyone if he happens to have been native of Lafayette, where he himself grew up. °His father was a

§| bridge builder, and maintenance en-

gineer for the Wabash Railroad when the bridges were built of wood and the builder had to be a cabinet

‘maker,

He carries his years well. He is up early each day, takes a walk before store opening, and is on the dot.

He stays throughout the store day.

He will be at the store all day to-

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STOCK ‘TAX DEADLINE EXTENDED TO AUG. 31

An extension until Aug. 31 has been granted for payment of capital stock taxes, Will H. Smith, internal revenue collector, announced today. The tax is levied on all corporations not specifically’ exempted by the commissioner of internal revenu. It was due June 30 but the extension was granted because the new blanks made necessary by a change in .the law have not been received. ; Between 13,000 and 14,000 corporations in the State will pay the tax, Mr. Smith said.

HOTEL MAN PATENTS 15-SECTION TOWEL

CLEVELAND, O,, July 20 (U. P.). —Jack Riley, manager of a Cleveland hotel; is the inventor of a new kind of towel. “Towels have been a headache to me—in fact, to all hotel men—for a long time,” Mr. Riley said. “Ines hotel, a towel is much more expensive than is justified. So I de-

cided to do something about it.” Mr. Riley said that his investightion showed that the average hotel} guest, showing an extravagance which ‘he would not display at

Suburban Lakewood has

home, used three and one-third bath towels each day. “But the big expense,” Mr. Riley said, “was the replacement of the damaged towels. Once the ordinary

{bath towel is damaged, it unravels,

Just like a silk stocking, and has fo be thrown away.” Mr. Riley’s towel now is patented. It is 4 feet in width and 5 feet long. “It’s made of 15 squar@ sections,” Mr. Riley explained. “If one section is torn, all we do is replace

that section. This eliminates the

necessity of throwing dway a whole towel, slightly damage It also saves 13 per cent in manufacturing. “I'm surprised myself at how successful it is. Hotel managers all over the country have been asking about the towel.”

2D TWISTER RETURNS GRANARY TO ITS SITE

ANADARKO, Okla. July 20 (U. P.) —Now that his 1000-bushel steel granary is back in place, H. E. Stephens hopes the wind will leave

it alone. Recently a twister - hit Mr. Stephens’ farm, picked up the granary and set it atop a small road grader 150 feet away. A week later, while Mr. Stephens still puzzled how to get the granary off the grader, another twister came along. It lifted the bin and returned it to within 30 feet of its foundation.

GETS FIRE-LESS PRIZE

CLEVELAND, July 20 (U. P.).— been awarded first prize for fire prevention in its population class by the

-{U. S. Chamber of Commerce for the

.|11th consecutive year. It had a reduction of 33% per cent in its fire loss last year as compared with the preceding year.

LIS FOR BARRIER ON INDIANA STONE!

Hoosier Commission Halls Defeat of Proposal in N. Y. Legislature.

The Indiana Commission on Interstate Co-Operation today hailed as its major victory the defeat of a hill in the New York Legislature which uld have set up a trade

barrier ‘against Indiana limestone products.

“The bill would have prevented

importation into New York of Indiana estone in rough form)” William | Treadway, Indiana Com mission secretary, said. “It would have injured the operations of all of Indiana’s many limestone mii Frank Finney, Commission Tr man, said the Indiana group had been opposing the bill through the New York Co-Operation Commission for several weeks. He said word was received today that the bill had been defeated despite vigorous support. Mr. Treadway declared that pas-

' | sage of the bill in New York would |§ have been the signal for similar

legislation in other states, “because brid York laws are copied by many states.”

FOLKLORE LAND T0 60 MODERN

Santee-Cooper Project Will Revolutionize Low: Country. COLUMBIA, S. C., July 20 (U. P.).

—The South Carolina Low Country, rich in legend but long a trying

economic problem, soon may become |i )

the setting for a social revolution in the state. The long-delayed Santee-Cooper

project is under way at last, and for |

the Low Country its completion will mean: 1. Reclamation of more than 150 thousand acres of bottom lands which have been wholly or partly under water for as long as the oldest Low Country resident can rememer 2. Cheap water transportation through the section, extending Seiad to Columbia, and to arleston on the Southern CaroTs coast. 3. Cheap commercial and residential power rates, to be set up by the Santee-Cooper authority on a scale comparable with those of the TVA. 4. Unlimited agricultural possibilities in the soil fertilized through the years by es vegetable matter.

BLINDS SNAKE WITH

LOS ANGELES, July 20 (U. P.). —Cannon, shells, hand-grenades and miscellaneous armaments sufficient to equip a battalion were en route to Mexico today. The $70,000 worth ar arms recently found cached in a Los Angeles warehouse reportedly were purchased by a syndicate of Mexican businessmen for possible resale to their Government. The identity of the Mexicans, as well as that of the former owners, was not Tayesled. Maj. R. L. Dine-

KROGER

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three years while one deal after

ley of San Franelseo said he acted : as agent but had not owned the cache. The Los. Angeles County Assessor’s office planned a public auction] of the weapons yesterday, but a few hours before the event, Maj. Dineley arrived and paid a $1356 tax bill. He said the new owners supplied| the money. . Last night the arms were taken away in trucks. Maj. Dineley said| the arsenal had been kicking around

another fell through.

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DUST, THEN KILLS IT|

YAKIMA, Wash., July 20: (U.P? |—Rancher Ralph Sundquist was walking through one of his orchards when he saw a rattlesnake coiled to strike. He moved away until the snake uncoiled and slithered to a small brush clump. Then he gathered up handsful of dust and threw them at the snake’s head until it was blinded. While it writhed on the ground. Mr. Sundquist trampled it to death

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