Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 295, Hammond, Lake County, 27 May 1919 — Page 1

INTERNATIONAL KSWS -TTJLL I2ASED WISE SSE.VICE.

On streets and newsstands, 30 per copy. Delivered by carrier in Hammond and West Hammond, 50 c per month. LOCAL RAIN VOL. XIII, NO. TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1919. HAMMOND, INDIANA.

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HER WAY TO EUROPE Expected to Arrive This After-: noon By. Three O'clock Chicago Time. DETAILS OF FLIGHT. Official flying time of the NC-4 The NC-4 left Rockaway Beach, L. on May 3, but started from Trespassey on the actual flight across the Atlantic at 6:07 p.m. (New York time) May 16, arriving at the Azores the following day. Her official flying time is as follows: Rockaway to Halifax (540 miles) 7 hours 47 minutes. Halifax to Trepassey (430 miles) 8 hours 53 minutes. Trepassey to Horta, Azores (1,200 miles) 15 hours. 13 minutes. Horta to Ponta de Gada (150 miles) one hour 44 minutes. If she reaches Lisbon before 4 o'clock this afternoon (New York time), the NC-4 will have crossed the Atlantic in less than 7 hours actual flying time. The Mauretania made the best record of any steamer when she crossed four days. 17 hours, 6 minutes on February 20, 1908. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27, 4:00 p. m. The NC-4 passed station 12. It has one more to pass. [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27 - The NC-4 passed station 11 at 1:10 p. m., the navy department was advised by radio. Station 11 is approximately 550 nautical miles or nearly 650 land miles from Ponta del Gada, the starting point. No report was received from Station 10. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27. With her jump from Ponta del Gada to Lisbon, more than one-fourth completed, the NC-4 passed over Station No. 5, about 250 nautical miles out at 9:35 Washington time, according to a radio dispatch to the navy department. The 250 miles were made in three hours and seventeen minutes. Thirty minutes later she passed over Station 4. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27. The NC-4 passed the half-way mark on her flight from Ponta del Gada to Lisbon when She passed ever Station 3, at 11:14 a. m., Washington time, according to a radio message to the navy department this afternoon. She passed over station 7 at 10:40. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27 The NC-4, flying at a terrific rate, of speed, passed over Station No. 2 at 7:38, according to a message to the navy department. This station is about 100 nautical miles from the starting point at Ponta del Gada, thus making some 100 nautical miles traveled in one hour and twenty minutes. She passed over the first station ship at 7:13, making the second fifty miles in 25 minutes. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] WASHINGTON, May 27. The NC-4 passed station No, 4 at 8:54 a. m.. Washington time, the navy department was advised. This station is approximately 200 nautical miles from the starting point, the distance having been traveled is two hours and thirty-six minutes. The second 100 miles was traveled in one hour and sixteen minutes. No report of the time she passed station No. 3 was received. (BULLETIN.) [ INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE] LISBON, May 27. - A shrieking of sirens, led by the U. S. cruiser Rochester, announced shortly before noon that Lieut. Commander A. C. Read had left Ponta del Gada in the American naval seaplane NC-4 on the 800 mile leg of his trans-Atlantic air journey from the Azores to Lisbon. Intense excitement followed for the Portuguese had been looking forward for many days for this historic event. Many bets had been laid on the length of time it would require to make the flight and when the jump-off would take place at Ponta del Gada. By JACK VEIOCK [STAFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE] PONTA DEL GADA, Azores, May 27. Carrying America's hopes for success in the trans-Atlantic flight the seaplane NC-4 winged away from here at 6:18 New York time this morning on the last leg of the trip. Commander Reid, before the

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Kennedy's Heart Hurt Him Also But Marriage Clerk Apologized After His Attack of Heart Trouble. [INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE ] SEATTLE, Wash., May 27 C. M Kennedy, who issues the marriage licenses in this county is an exceedingly polite and withal a proper young man. When a prospective bride and groom approached his desk recently here is what happened that shocked Kennedy: "Name please?" said Kennedy to the sweet-faced thing before him. "Helmaheart Hurts," came the unexpectcd reply. "Er -- I'm sorry." said Kennedy with a frown. Turning to the prospective groom, Kennedy asked his name, thinking to give the coming bride an opportunity to recover from her evident attack of heart trouble. "George T. Halliday," said the the man. "And now your name." said Kennedy to the apparently rerecovered bride-to-be. "Helmaheart Hurts." she repeated. "Young lady, said Kennedy, severely, "I am a married man and a father and it grieves me to hear such language from a girl getting a marriage license. If your heart hurts I'm sorry, but profanity is wholly unnecessary." "What the future Mrs. Halliday is trying to tell you." said the young man, "is that her name is H-e-l-m-a H-e-a-r-t H-u-r-t-z." Kennedy apologized. LAKE CO. PROTESTS AT CAPITAL TIMES BUREAU AT STATE CAPITAL INDIANAPOLIS, , lnd.. May 27 -J. Glenn Harris, representative from Lake county, called at the offices of the state board of tax commissioners and of Governor Goodrich in the interest of three southern Lake county roads. The state tax board recently denied bond issues proposed for the improvement of the roads and considerable opposition has been manifested against the denial by southern Lake county residents. A petition for rehearing may be presented. When the state board denied the road bonds it authorized bonds for two industrial roads in the northern part of the county. FAVOR WOMAN ON THE SCHOOL BOARD Business Men Would Like to See One Named to Succeed A. J. Dreesen. A movement is on foot in Hammond to have a woman appointed on the school board to succeed A. J. Dreesen, whose term of office, expires next month. It is generally believed in the city that the council could make a tenstrike by electing to membership on the Hoard of Education some wideawake and well qualified Hammond woman who is in touch with the educational matters in the schools. It is generally recognized that within a short time that women will have the right of suffrage. They will in all probability be able to vote at the next presidential election and if there is any place in municipal affairs where woman are entitled to representation it is on the board of education. A number of the" city councilmen are in favor of appointing a woman and the movement is gathering momentum dally. A prominent Hammond citizen and business man said this morning. "I am most unreservedly in favor of the appointment of a woman on the Board of Education of the city of Hammond and the present city administration can prove itself an instrument of progress and modernity by naming a woman to participate in the school board's problems. Other cities have done so. Why should not we do so? The women are entitled to a great deal more representation than they are getting." MARTIAL LAW IS EXPECTED WINNIPEG. Mav 27 Martial law is believed imminent in Winnipeg today and prospects of a settlement which yesterday seemed favorable, appears as remote as when the general strike first was called on May 15. The first indication of the intention of the government to deal severely with the strikers came when mounted police were ordered to tender mail to the railway clerks and if they refused to accept it, to take the clerks from the cars. If this is done, the labor lenders declare running crews on the trains will strike in symratby and refuse to operate trains. This would result in a transportation tieup throughout all Western Canada.

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Democratic State Chairman Will Try to Swing National Convention for Indianapolis.

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; Simpson is accus-d of attempting to I (TIMES BUREAU AT STATE CAPITAL) Jfittock the (jirl and the lower half of j INoJANol'oLIsj, lnd.. May Z. lnd- the county is pretty well stirred up overt iunapoiis wi!l get the next democratic ' the ca?e. Indeed the feeling is such' national convention, if State Chairman that Simps. m sv.-ore he could not pet a' Van Nuys and the rest of the democra- jury of Lake county men to trv him ' tic politicians from this state have fairly. He sought to have his" trial1 enough ini'luenceto swing it here when venued to I'orter county but Judge Mar- j they attend the big conference and, tin Smith refused his application. The'

lo not enet j.lae I. at w.'W in epei il at this e for tie Van Niv . luctiKo this week. It is fiat the Chicago coufertiire will determine the I'l-O n:ilio::al convention. - and the others feel that kind of s"ei is sown at e this tune it may sprout : th a cu:i v cnlion for Indi .f the riKot. the con: n i, ' and brio-; fi lanapolis. Chairman Van Nuys has ! th - national convention discussed , proposition . with local commercial and business or- : ganizations. to find out what once ur- ! agtment they would give to his effort ! to land the convention, and it is unI derstood that he has good enough j pledges to justify him in making the effort. i There seems t.. be no good reason j why this city should not go after Ill's i convention. Chicago cannot get either ; the republican or democratic conven'ion next year. Mayor Thompson will ; Mill be in office there in l'J-0. and ; neither political party will be willing I to take a chance by making national nominations there. It seems to be pretj ty well setlkxl that the republican national convention will go to Minneapolis j or St. I'aul, and the democratic conveni lion may a-s well come' tt lndinnapolia : afi any other place. St. Louis wants it agtiin, iut St. Louis had Hie 1 C 1 eonvention. A number of Indiana democrats will ' go to e'hieago ,uh Van Nuys to root for the eonvii.tion. Among the nuuiber are Tli"i:np Ta;:;art, former governor Kalston: t1i;irl"S A. G reat house, the eanui'iat- for tiio nomination fojr : governor; K. G. Moti'man, of Fort Wayne ' secretary ef tie- i' tuoeratn; national ' commit to", and olie It is utider.sn",! that their purpose will be to start the ; movement anil lin n push it .along un- , til the time comes for the national com- : mittt"! to el,, , se the city. i The Gary Printing &- I publisher of the Gary i wa.s made defendant in ! ed this morning in th Publishing Evi ning I i libel SIM' I In rmnoti'l i 'o., ; 'r.st. I fil- j su- ' pro- ' 'o. ; ;,0t' ! i p. rior court by I motcr of the Wilbur Wynanr, K. Giant lottery The complaint which a.sks for damages, wa.; filed by Attorneys K. C j Crumpaokor and Edwin 11. l"ri dri'-h. J arid Edwin H '1'1'e suit i 1 rbdrieh. , based upon eertaii ,rBr'd "false malicious, defamatory and ', libelous stafniettts and insinu ition." ; 'published in the edition of May 1'!, 101:1. ; I The llr-t nrii-Je i given as an inter- i view with "-rt It. Kraft, in con te" , fi i the battery i'i . h.i'-ti ho asks for thi overthrow- of Wy nai t and his gang"! j in order to n-ako toe company a ,uc-1 ! cess. i 1 A letter i'rom Kraft is also qu-'lidj as hay ing been published in this i.-sm : ! ti gether with an unsigned potter pur-; I porting to be from one of th; st.ck- ; ho'ders. Tin., comes nn edito.-i,it, c:r.- ' ! menting on a recent action of the board of uireclo.-.s m rTthfowing the Wynaut ; j faction v heli seemi d to be in lin; wi'b ; j the wisli"(3 of the Post. j ! Seveial tlnr ins.ti-i.ces ere ci ivl 'n j I the compla.n' wl- ch is in two ivttn- j I graphs. As the )..;p' r was circulated I 'among th business associates of Mr.; , Wynant, bolii in C'ary and other citi. s. : I his stand o.- i f fiij to have be -n i - J jured and f..r that reason .kx reparation lit-jugh tl e court-. PAST DUE CHECKS SENT I WASHINGTON. May IS. On ml. j lion ov erdue allotment cheeks w ill be (sent out by the bureau of war risk inj s lira nee immediately, Secretary Glass announced today, following the neeipt of President that he would sign with the last possible delay the deficiency 'measure passed by ".Congress last week. TO STOP ARMS SMUGGLING f HUTroviTiAk'H urn's erDwirrt TAOLK pass tv at a v tvva .national guardsmen are to be ued to I stop the smuggling of arms across the ! border into Mexico to Villista bandits rs the result of a conterente in I jedras i Negras between Adjt. Gen. Harlcy. of Texas, and Gov. Mlrelas of Coahuilo, it 1 was announced today.

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SIMPSON IS PLACED ON TRIAL Girl Accuses Lowell Busiiness Man and Politician at Crown Point. [SPECIAL TO THE TIMES] CROWN POINT, lnd.. Mav -7Shocking charges were made against Samuel Simpson, a prominent Lowell business man and once a candidate for sheriff of Lake county, in the criminal court here yesterday afternoon w hen a thirteen year old Lowell girl, an orphan, took the witness stand against him. court did. however, wrmil Vi. , ... a I'orttr county jury and the examination of the jurymen concluded at noon. ' The trial began in the afternoon before j a packed eourt room. A big throng" of I .Simpson's townsmen were present and he. was defended by W. J. McAber of! Hammond and J. W. liclshaw of Lowell. The prosecutrix. Miss Marjory Mor- ! gan. a comely lass, who lives with her t aunt am lin(,Ip h ,rPnt. iri,e j dead, told her story in a quiot lniprfs.sive way. She described how she cam ; to be in Simpsen's ice cream parlor ; where she bought refreshments. Simp- '. ?on came over to her and asked if sh i didn't want anymore ice cream and was told that she had no money. Simpson, according to the girl, said he would give her some if she would step in the back room. "W hen she went there Simpson's ! proposals and actions were such that j she screamed for help. It was a sorry. ' sordid, nasty tale that the witness told j and shocked the courtroom, i i Two witness, both girls, were introduced and testified that the defendant j had made improper advstices to them. The defense did not hVak. flown the j testimony of the-prosecuting witness to any great extent and her straight-for- ! w ard story evidently impressed the j jury. This morning Simpson was put j on the stand and entered a flat denial as ; to the girl's charges. He stuck to his; story through cross-examination. Sv- 1 eral reputable Lowell men were put on the witness stand after and testified that Simpson's general reputation in Lowell for morality was not at all de sirable. The ense will go to the jury, it! is believed, about lock. UXE GEORGE In an accident, similar to that which cost the life of tjiirgt. Joseph Albert on. Calumet boulexard, a month ago, the: 1'ostltwait delivery truck, driven Tjy William Scubbs, 623 Hohinan street, Hammond, was thrown into Lake George yesterday evening. S-'chu!bs fortunately! escaped injury when the car ran down : the- embankment into the water. The: incident occurred ju;t north of ih.j bridge a short distance from the scene of the Albert accident. j Schubb w;is driving the truck south1 when he was overtaken ly William! J'.riest of Crown Point driving his mo- ; torcycle with a side car in which rn- ' other Crown Point man was riding. In : swinging around past tho truck the I fender of the sid.-'Tir glazed the lett. front who ! of the inn k causing il to! turn toward the lakf. L fore the driver, could light it. the car was in the water.; Kriest and his comjvnvi. on their way. Si hull says them but they failed to t;i motorist off. red the u-e of .and with Schubb aboard chase overtaking lhe me in continued ailed to A not her p. his machine they gave torcycle ill t'ohimbia avemi' and Summer street, tifliier? W arner and Einsele arrived and pJaced the nun tinder prrest. In the trial this morning Kriest declared be knew nothing of the accident until the pursuing car stopped him. He admitted he had been drinking and entered a plea of guiMy to the charge of driving a ear while intoxicated. Judge Kloz gave him a tine of $-10 and costs. i PAIR OFFICIALS RESIGNED lnd , May 27. Hecouncil refused to apto build modern tatVALPA P.A1SO, cause the countypro p r i a t f money tle sheds for the better protection of live stock at the fa r grounds, all the fficials of the Portt r tyunty Fair Association resigned yesterday afternoon -nj the live ftok breeders withdrew :-oin the cssociaf'in. This action pretludc? all possibility of holding a county fair hre this year, and without o- e at Crown Point, too, knocks til's coi-ncr of the state out. DIRIGIBLE STARTS ON A CRUISE t INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 1 LONDON. May 27 The giant Hritish i d.ricibl baloon lift?i anchiir and j started northward on ' ternoon, said a Selby j Star. cruise this dispatch io th. It was reported a few- days ago that ih R-33 might start across the Atlantic writ!, I Ixirt t i m m

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TO STAFF OFFICE t DATTLE CHEEK, Mich. May :7. Maj. Gen. William G. Haan, who commanded the 32d division overseas and v. r..a recently given command of Camp Custer, has been ordered to Washing - ton to take cnarge ot me department ot war plans of the general staff, it was announced today. Brig. Gen. Winans w ill assume temporary command of e-usiei i,niii-.-iia... WEST HAMMOND TRIP ENDS BADLY i ' Claure M. Hale, Because of Jaunt Thither Will Take Trip to Jail Now. Claurlo M. Haiti, who stays at the restaurant at Gibson, was arrested yes terday by Hammond police chare d with, as.atilt uni hiitt'iy upon Henry P.rnmer, who resid. s at the same pi ice. Hale had just returner! from West Hammond and was soon mixed up in trouble with several of his former friends, I'.rnmcr ejected him from the restaurant when lie became too noisy via! later Halo called him outside to set ' le the affair. Plan, r and a witness said that Hale used a knife in the fight and that liramer was cut on the neck. Hale declared he never carried a kn'fe. but that be had a safety razor biado in his hand when Itramer pushed him from the front pnrili the first time and that it may have scratched Pfamer's neck in the scuffle. Judge Klotz decided it would be bitter to forget the l.nii'e part as the- evidence was conflicting :-; he gave Hale n $10 fine and fifteen cloys in the county jail. E0RAH IS BADLY BEAT! MMTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE) wamu.vi.io.n, -May 7 llv a sweep ing majority, 34 to S, republican senutors, assemjiled I i an open conference ! today, refused to accept the warning of : Senator Borah, progressive republican.' of Idaho, that the i hojee of Senator' Penrose, old guard republican, of Pen-j I'.sylvania. as chairman of the senate finance committee, meant the "endors"- ' nier.t of a system .f taxation that would! do more to bring Bolshevism in Hie ! United States and destroy American inKtitutions than anything else." ! GIVE THEM 24 HOURS. (Exclusivo Cable to the I. ST. S. from the London Daily Express.) VIENNA. May 27. It is reported here that the allies have ordered the Poles to evacuate Iloi ishiv, in Galicia within n hours.

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I'rince Antome Isibesro and his wife who was .Miss Llizabt-th Asquith. When Miss Llizabeth Asquith married Prince Antoine Bibesco recently two ceremonies were held, one in the Greek church and the other in St. Marearet's church at Westminster. London. Prince Bibesco is secretary of the Roumanian legation in London and the Princess 15'Lcsco is the daughter of Herbert II. Asquith, the British statesman. The photograph shows the newly married couple starting out for a morning walK. i , . j Shriners from the northern part of Indiana as far cast as Mishawaka fiocke dto Hammond vesterdav to at I tend the initiation of one of the largest classes of candidates ever, handled by oraK lempie. i ney came in swarms ! until standing room in the temple waa I exhausted snd many did not get even a j look in at the evening ceremonies, j The big event was in preparation for j the Imperial convention which is to be ' held at Indianapolis. June in to 12. It Is the determination of Orak Shriners hat Hammond shall hae the best rfpesentation and u'ly iOtel aecom-1 i modations have been asked by ninety- ! j eight which with the patrol and drum i nTJZ" ULU KtSl ; wil go a? they have two weeks yet tn ; i which to decide. j j The class of eighty-six candidates ! j was divided into three sections yestcr- i ! day. One was initiated in the after- j ' noon atid the remaining two look tho : A.ork after supper. Following jes the ; list: Junes Aitken. Gary; Cnrl Emanuel Anderson. LaPorte; .Tames A. Athens, Gary; Victor J. P.adeaux, East Chicago: Otto Edward Boils, Hammond; Alfred William Prandt. Gary; Edwin Nelson Canine. East Chicago: iliorge Telnoia Ciapper. East Chicago; Henry Clav Cleveland. Hammond; William Ewart (Continued on page- two.) FORD LAUNCHES DIRECT ATTACK AGAINST TRIB MT. CLEMENS. Mi-h.. May 27. Attorneys for Henry Ford in h s million dollar libel suit against, the Chicago Tribune today launched a direct attack against the Tribune allegation that. Ford employes who 'c': the em-!lo-of the company in 1910 to serve

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j i n the Mexican border had been reI : used re-'statement. Three employes j of tl e Ford company testified that tin y bed gone to Texas in that year N'with ti:e national guar 1. All three, ' nceci Jiiig to their testimony, had been I'loiiililtd reinstatement and 911 had

been re-instated without any bickeror difficulties, directly- upon their i eturn from military service. The Tribune attorneys spent little time on cross-examination of the Ford witness-??-, except to quiz them as to win l'-'er or not they had been paid by ;he Fori' company during their stay in the rimy STATEMENT DENIED.

ict.ff rc'REPONDNT"30 SERVICE) 1 the audits following the robbery werBERLIN. M?y 27 Premier St henlc-I .-ailed to the detective fiureau .-yid partniann's private secretary today author-j ly- identified the suspect as the red-hair-ized the International News Service to ed man they saw in the green bandit

j deny most emphatically that the tier- ! man cabinet had ever gone- on record as ! stating that it would sign or would not ! sign the peace treaty. H" added that the cabinet at no time had issued any ' announcement of its p.-licy in this res- """

ITALY IS i Oil RAMPAGE ONCE MORE

Orlando and Colleagues will Refuse to Sign Unless the Treaty Disposes of the City of Fiume. (BULLETIN.) John Edwin Nevin fs-ft correspondent i n. service PAKIS, May 27. President Wilo will leave for th United States within a fortnlg'ht, according' to present plans. ! It la possible that the data of his dei partnre may be fixed aa early as June 5. The president la determined not to i allow the Austrian complications con. cernlng- reparations and the Italian-Jug-oslar boundary keep him la Prance. ; Ke Intends to leave as soon after the ' German, treaty is signed as possible. I It is now regarded as certain that, if ' tha Germans sig-n. as it is confidently ! believed they will, the signatures will ' he aXlxed between June 1 and Jane 10 ! (BUXXETIN.) i PAKTS, May 27. President Wilson, In j an address here last night in which h- ; touched briefly upon the leagrtie of usI Lions and tha oppositions he had enI countered in the United States to ions j of his plan-, urijed all Americans to 1 unite r.tad "zC: an example" to the peo- ; pie cf cthor nations. j The president was the principal ' speaker at a dinner given in honor cf I President-elect Fessoa. of Brazil. In tfcs 1 course of his remarks he let drop a i rtr.tcment that was accepted by some an. araenncoment that he would not ajain bo a candidate for the presidency . T.hon he said that it was delightful f cr him to know that "my presidency Is r.ot i ahead of me," and that his (Fessoa's ' presidency is ahead of him. John Parkerson 1stff correspondent i. n. service PARIS, May 27. Tlie Italian envoy sare again threatening to hold up the peace proceedings unless the Adriatic problems are definitely settfed in the Austrian treaty, it vas understood today. While it is regarded as virtually certain that the. Italians will sign the German treaty, it Is learned start, said that he hoped to reach Lisbon, Portugal, by 4:30 this afternoon, New York time, completing the flight across the Atlantic. The distance from Ponta del Gada . i to Lisbon is approximately 800 ! nautical miles COWTXNX! TO XftaJXH. If the XC-4 flies to Portugal without (Continued on page two.) SUSPECT III IS ARRESTED " ( BULLETIN.) ITPECIAL TO THE TIMES HEGEWISCH, IU., May 27. At one o'clock this afternoon President Cox had not been called to Chicago to Identify the 'suspect and beyond what he bad read of the arrest was not notified by the police that he was needed. CHICAGO. May 27. Lloyd E. Gootlrith, one of .vo heirs to a $50,000 estate left in trust by his father. A. A. Goodrieh. a Chicago manufacturer, was arrested yesterday in his summer home at Lake Zurich and will be viewed todaybe victims of the Interstate National bank robbery at Hegew isch. Lieut. Michael Hughes, who with detectives from the bureau motored to Lake Zurich yesterday and returned with Goodrich, said he had arrested him because of information a red haired man driving a green car was the leader of the bandits. Of Course Ke Denies Zt. Goodrich, whose hair is red and win owns a green car. denied he was in anyway connected with tne robbery. His car was stolen weeks ago. lie said, and had been recovered hut yesterday. Goodrich has been arrested a number of times. In October. 1913, he wa sentenced to Joliet lor from one year to life for robbery. He was paroled within thirteen j months, but later was returned for violation of his parole. Previously he had served a sentenco of three months in the county jail for robbery. His father had him arrested once for stealing his automobile and taking two girls and another man for 'a ride. 1 Bullet Kiddled Trousers. ; Motorcycle Policemen William Reicar. Suspicion was further directed toj ward Goodrich when a search of the j Lake Zurich place disclosed a pair of ' trousers with three bullet holes in them. j Today Lawrence Cox, president of the j ha nk. will be osked to identify Good-

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