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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 1

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THE INDIANAPOLIS SUNDAY STA Telephone RI. 7311 INDIANA'S METROPOLITAN SUNDAY NEWSPAPER. Cloudy and Mild. VOL. 27.

NO. 305. Entered as Feeond-Cla Matter at Port Ofllc. IndlanapoiU, Ind. Isiued Dally and Sunday.

SUNDAY MORNING, AritIL 6, 1930. Pally, By Carrier, IS Cent! Per Week; Sunday, 10c Per Copy; Mall, By Zones, ibc to Jl.uU. TEN CENTS. ft En ft Ifi) NQ Today How to Make Millions. A Real 3-Power Treaty.

Optimistic Raskob. Real Flying, Soon. 9 PURSUERS CATCH Wright, BonerBry, Enters Congress Race DEO HOLDUP SMALLEST VOTE CANDIDATES FAG MOTHER AWAITING DEATH THIRD SUSPECT IN FISHERS BANK ROBBERY IS CAPTURED 0 IM DOXXIE SCHROKDKR. Cecil Johnson. Wilbur Ferguson.

Manning of the criminal identification bureau, had endeavored to trap Johnson several times in the last few days. Their joint efforts led him into a nest of detectives yesterday. When questioned he denied participation in the robbery. James Ryan was captured recently in Indianapolis, and Wilbur Ferguson was apprehended in Edinburg. Both implicated Johnson when thev were questioned by police at the time of their arrest.

Each was sentenced to serve 10 years for bank banditry in the Hamilton county court, and now are in jail at Noblcsville. Indianapolis de- CONTIMED ON PACE FOUR. VIEWED BY 14.DD4 The Star's Display Pronounced Most Successful Ever Held in State. Fourteen thousand and four persons passed through the doors of the Athenaeum Thursday, Friday and yesterday to view The Star's exhibition of quilts, which closed last night. It has been pronounced the most successful event of its kind ever held in the state of Indiana and visitors from all parts of the state came to Indianapolis to inspect the 461 quilting masterpieces that were displayed.

Great public interest, manifest in the attendance figures, rewarded participants in The Star's Flower Garden Quilt Contest for the many hours of patient work they put on their entries. It was their show and it was a "hit." Make Cle Examination. Some of the visitors came even with flashlights and magnifying glasses to examine closely the beauties of nncdlecraft they found everywhere in the exhibition hall. Many women who had started quilts for the contest but abandoned them in the course of the winter, expressed regret that they had not carried on, and took away with them new ideas and fresh inspiration for finishing, for their own pleasure, the work they had commenced. The peak of the attendnnce at the exhibition came Friday when 6, WO visitors passed down the long aisles draped with quilts.

Five thousand six hundred and thirty-four more enjoyed the unusual spectacle yester day. Thursday, when the exhibition was open to the public only from 2 p. m. to 10 p. 1,900 attended-Total attendance was 14,004.

Quilts to Be Removed. Tomorrow The Star's crew of "stage hands" will begin the task of taking down the show. Each quilt will be removed from its place on the racks and neatly wrapped to be returned quickly to its owner. Quilts to be returned by mail will be in the hands of the pout office tomorrow. Quills to be called for will be ready for delivery Tuesday and thereafter.

Persons calling for their en tries at the quilt headquarters, Room .117, the Meridian hife building, must bring their duplicates of the record cards as a means of identification. When the list of prize winners in The Star's Flower Garden Quilt was announced Friday morning, one name unfortunately was overlooked. Mrs. Frank Abcrcrombe of Rushville should have been mentioned among the ten winners of $7.50 awards. The exhibition is over, the contest is ended, but the quilts will remain in many Hoosier homes as lasting tributes to the artistry of their makers, useful and beautiful.

8 PRIZES for CHILDREN are offered in the third Big Eight contest which begins in The Star this morning. Color sketches of Felix, the comic cat. See Tage 6, Section 6. 1 1 Mom QUILT EXHIBITION Smiling happily and carrying with him perhaps the last gifts he ever will receive from his mother, 5-year-old Donnie Schroeder leaves the detention home at Pittsburgh, where he was held while his mother, Mrs. Irene Schroeder, and her alleged lover, W.

Glenn Dague, were convicted of the slaying of Corporal Paul Brady of the Pennsylvania state police, and sentenced to death. Model Dwelling and "Tiny Town" Compete With 130 Exhibits for Interest of First Nighters. SHOW FACTS. WHAT Ninth annual Realtors' Home Complete exposition. WHERE Manufacturers building at Indiana state fairgrounds.

TIME Every day this week, starting tomorrow, from 11 a. m. to 10:30 p. ni. Show closed all day today.

ATTRACTIONS The 1930 model home centerpiece, "Tiny Town," and 130 Tomorrow has been designated as Lumbermen's day. Amid a setting of gorgeous exhibits all bent on glorifying the American home, colorful and bewildering lights and happy spectators, the ninth an nual Realtors' Home Complete Exposition was officially opened to the public last night in the Manufac turers' building at the Indiana state fairgrounds. It was Realtors' night and mem bers of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, which sponsors the show each year, attended in formal dress. J. Frank Cantwell, director of the show, estimated that rri.c than twelve thousand perst.r.s attended last night.

This is the largest number of paid admissions for one night's attendance at the local home show, Mr. Cantwell said. Promptly at 6 o'clock aerial bombs were set off as the opening of the formal ceremonies. E. Grinslade, president of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, had charge of the program.

The doors to the mammoth building housing the exposition were ordered thrown open to the public by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan. 1930 Model Home Openpd. Next was the official opening of the 1930 model home which forms the centerpiece for the entire exposition. This beautiful two-story structure, which is on an attractively land scaped "lot" In the center of the building, immediately attracts the eyes of the visitor upon entering the CEREMONY OPENS 01 COMPLETE SHDWTD PUBLC By Arthur Brisbane SAN SIMEON, April 5.

WOULD you like to make several million dollars a year? Invent a way to apply foreign language words to the photographic films of American talking pictures. Silent pictures are obsolete, and America, that had 90 per cent of the foreign silent picture business, sees its monopoly in danger. Foreigners will not listen to talking pictures that they can not understand, and foreigners can not make pictures that their own people really like. Adolph Menjou, one of the most intelligent men in the moving picture world, has just made a picture in Paris, in the French language. Born in this country, he speaks French as well as English.

But actors able to combine American methods and a foreign tongue are few. What men can imagine, they can do. Find a way to replace American talk on movie films, with French, Italian, Chinese talk, and you will have wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, keep the world's picture industry in America, and earn the blessings of George Eastman, and all the higher film powers. Italy and France, it is said, believe that all the London talk will end in nothing. They are expected to withdraw, leaving Japan, Britain and this country to agree on a three-power treaty.

That will be a very conservative treaty, British imperial conservatism, Japanese Mikado-government conservatism, American financial conservatism, the last most conservative of all. Do we need such a treaty? Did anything make it necessary to take in partners? Was it necessary to drag in Japan? Will it really be a three-power treaty, or a treaty with Japan and Britain interested on the far side of the Pacific and we, with our interests on this side, Britain and Japan automatically in sympathy. Why not a North American three-power treaty, made up of Canada, the United States and Mexico? Would not that kind of treaty, with the interests of all three powers concentrated on this North American continent, be the best treaty for us and all America? Mr. Raskob, able head of the national Democratic committee, actually hopes to see an end of prohibition, which would mean repeal of the eighteenth amendment. Mr.

Raskob will not see that repeal, his grandchildren will not see it, barring a revolution, which is not coming. Mrs. Boole, W. C. T.

told it all when she said: "The eighteenth amendment will last as long as the runteenth, which gives votes to women." She might have added that prohibition, in some form, will last as long as white men in the South want to keep gin from colored men, and farmers and industrialists in the North want to keep wnisky from hired men. The Southern white men, Northern Industrialises and farmers being able to get what they want, of course. Two interesting American flights, started this week from Pacific to Atlantic. Capt. Hawks in a glider, towed by a heavier-than-air plane, is crossing the continent, hauled behind the engine.

A. W. Mooney, pilot and airplane builder of Wichita, Kas started in a tiny monoplane nonstop from ocean to ocean. Forced down after flying 2,000 miles, he holds the 100 horse power record for that distance. Germans, building solidly, plan a regular passenger trans-Atlantic service, two to three days at first, shorter time, later.

Real flying will soon be here. Your grandchildren will ask: "Grandpa, did you once travel on the railroad?" The government has ordered fifty new altack planes, and seventy-three bombing planes, total cost $2,909,500. Washington, wisely, encourages private thus stimulating aviation, generally. Government, also, should have its engineers at work on new flying ideas, ordering them to investigate, encourage and if necessary finance any good outside ideas. With a great engineer in the White House, it should not be necessary for Uncle Sam to depend on the accident of outside ideals, investments and inventions.

European and Asiatic governments work at their own air problems, taking financial risks that private builders can not be expected to take. Every citizen should co-operate n-ith the census takers, remembering that all information given is kept secret. Reports cover the national averages. No names are mentioned. President Hoover received the census taker, giving personally all desired information.

Follow his good example. He could not answer "yes or no one question "Do you own your house, or is it rented?" The President does not own the White House. And it is not rented. President Hoover has abolished presidential handshaking, and with it, the mumbling of "Pleased to meet you" platitudes supposed to be part of democratic government. Future Presidents will bless Mr.

Hoover for that courageous action, hi. Hsrlnratinn that lnat hand shaking energy and time be put Into PROHf BATTLE IN G.D.P.PRIMARY Author of Enforcement Law to Champion Cause in Struggle With Field of Avowed Wets. The prohibition issue will be the battle ground on which the Republican nomination for Seventh district representative in Congress will be fought. Frank E. Wright, author of the Wright "bone dry" law, entered the political fray to champion the dry cause yesterday when he filed with Otto G.

Fifield, secretary of state, as a candidate for the G. O. P. nomination for representative In Congress. Aligned against Wright are Ward B.

Hiner, Indianapolis business man, and Ira M. Holmes, attorney, on platforms to modify the prohibition laws. Sampsell Springs Surprise. Warren Sampsell, Washington township Republican chairman, sprang a surprise late yesterday afternoon when he filed as an independent candidate for Seventh district representative. Mr.

Sampsell announced that he would run on a light wines and beer platform. He is an advertising salesman. Shortly before midnight, Asa J. Smith entered the contest for the Republican nomination for representative in Congress from the Seventh district. Mr.

Smith is an attorney with offices at 613 Fletcher Savings and Trust building and lives at 3850 Winthrop avenue. He was a member of the Indiana House of Representatives in 1923 and is a veteran of the world war, having served in the Sixth United States marines. He was wounded in action at Belleau Wood. He was formerly private secretary to Harry S. New while Mr.

New was senator. He is a supporter of the prohibition amendment. Schuyler C. Mowrer, Indianapolis attorney and former service man, entered the congressional lists late last night. Mr.

Mowrer is reported to have the support of the county Republican organization. He had no statement to make relative to his platform, but is considered a dry. Mr. Mowrer was state inheritance tax administrator eight, years, resigning recently to enter private law practice. He is a member of the firm of Hottell, Mowrer Mote.

A member of the American Legion, he is past commander of Irvington post; he also is a member of the Forty and Eight. Mr. Mowrer is a member of the Columbia Club, the Scottish Rite, the Shrine and Delta Upsilon Fraternity. He is a member of the Methodist church. His home is 828 Middle drive, Woodruff Place.

Mr. Mowrer also is state chairman of the Republican Veterans of Indiana. Mr. Mowrer is a graduate of the Indiana law school. He served over seas with the 1st division.

During his service with the state tax board Mr. Mowrer drafted the state in heritance tax, which now Is in force. Archibald M. Hall, veteran Republican campaign orator and an In dianapolis business man, also is In the race for the G. O.

P. nomination for representative from this district. Mr. Hall's announcement of candl- CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO. WEATHER FORECAST.

Jim Crow says: A 1 1 I illative candidate kidnaped over In Illinois. Over here that probably would he classed it petit larceny. Forecast for Indiana for Sunday and Monday: Partly cloudy, cooler in north portion Sunday; Monday generally fair. Forecast for Indianapolis and vicinity for Sunday and Monday: Partly cloudy Sunday; Monday generally fair; not much change in temperature. United States Weather Bureau Special Re port for The IndlanapoiU Star, ALMANAC OF" THE DAY.

Sua Miei 8:21 1 Sun itti :14 WEATHER CONDITIONS YESTERDAY. Relative Humidity. 7 a. m. 65 pet I Noon 30 pet I 7 p.

in 31 pet immint rinrln? twpntv-four noun endlriK at 7 p. ra 00 Total amount ntnce Jan. 1. 1930 12.08 Accumulated departure from normal line Jan. 1 lexceM) 1 85 7 a m.

Pry 4 Wet 40 8S 5 Wet 7 p.m.. Dry 62 Wet 48 Minimum. 44 For the Same Date Lat Year. Ta rn 66 I Maximum PI SUSPECT AMD PIL Pair Is Arrested on West Side Trying to Escape After Auto Crashes Into Pole. Police bullets riddled an alleged bandit automobile at midnight last night in a sixty-mile an hour chase over rain-soaked streets of the West side.

One of the alleged bandit pair in the car was shot in tho right leg when he attempted to escape after his automobile had been wrecked against a telephone pole. The wounded man is Herman Rhude, 21 years old, 234 Blake street, and the other man, who was arrested, is Joseph Troy, 27 years old, 541 West Merrill street. They were captured by Scrgt. Leo Troutman and squad. Resemhle Sluggers.

They answer the description of a pair of sluggers who knocked down George Cox, years old, 56 North LaSalle street, in Camp Sullivan a short time before police took up the chase, Sergt. Troutman said. Cox told Sergt. Cummings of the police emergency squad that one man held him at bay with a revolver while the other slugged and robbed him. Sergt.

Troutman and Patrolman Yoh and Chambers had been sent to a house on Blake street on a report that the bandits who had robbed Cox were there. As the squad car approached, two men ran from the house, leaped into a roadster and sped away. Police pursued and at times the cars were running seventy miles an hour. Kquad Opens Fire. Sergt.

Troutman and his squad opened fire tryiag to puncture the tires on the speeding automobile. At North street and Belmont avenue, however, the pursued car slowed down apparently to stop. But as the police car began to draw alongside, the driver of the other car made a quick swerve to the left and began to speed again. The bumper of the police car was hooked by the bumper of the fleeing automobile and the squad car nearly overturned. The chase ended blocks farther at Tenth street and Belmont avenue, when the roadster side-swiped a telephone pole and careened into the side of a grocery store.

Try to Escape. Rhude and Troy jumped from the car before it had stopped. Rhude was shot after he had run a short distance. Troy was captured trying to climb a fence. Rhude was taken to the City hospital in the police squad car.

He and Troy are being held on vagrancy charges under high bond. The certificate of title and licenses on the car had been issued to Rhude for a 1925 car of another model, police said. Wife No. 3 Becomes 10th in Divorce Court Mixup CHICAGO, April 5. W) Paul Ellis, who sometimes walked to the altar under the name of Peter, said he married three wives.

A former wife suing him for back alimony said he married six. An attorney brought into court records today to prove the number ten. Thus the wife who sued for support of one of Ellis' sixteen children, became No. 9. though she thought herself No.

5, and his present wife, under the impression she was No. 3, became No. 10. The court, finding wife No. 10 In better circumstances than wife No.

9, ordered Ellis to pay the former wife $25 each of three coming Saturdays and $7 weekly thereafter. Operation Greatly Aids Booth Tarkington's Sight Definite assurance of great improvement, in the sight of Booth Tar-kington, Indiana author, who underwent a delicate "needling" operation upon his right eye in the Wilmeth eye institute of Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore Monday, was given with removal of the bandages yesterday, according to word received by his sister, Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson. He has been resting comfortably since the operation, a painful one, and plans to leave the hospital Tuesday. The author will visit friends la Philadelphia, before returning to his work in Indianapolis.

DROP PRESIDENT BROOKS University of Missouri Curators Decide on leave of Absence. COLUMBIA, April 5 W-Tha board of curators of the University of Missouri, meeting here to gate charges of faculty unrest, 1st today decided to give Dr. Stratton D. Brooks president of the university, a leave of absence from June 5 until Dec. 31 when his term expires.

Dean Walter Williams of the school of journalism, will become acting president June 5 and permanent president Deo. 31. Cecil Johnson, Arrested After Long Search, Denies He Aided in Holdup Two of Gang Sentenced. The third member of the trio alleged to have robbed the Fishers National bank, Feb. 24, was captured yesterday by detectives of the Indianapolis police department.

He is Cecil Johnson, 23 years old, said by two companions now In the Hamilton county Jail to have been driver of the bandit car when the three men took $0,900 from the bank after locking employes in the vault. Caught In Police Trap. Johnson, the object of several weeks' search by detectives and the state bureau of criminal identification and investigation, was arrested on Massachusetts avenue yesterday afternoon. He is held in the city prison under $11,000 bond on charges of vagrancy and being a fugitive from justice. Detective Sergeants Barnaby, White, Tutt, Whitsett, Johnson, Peats and Gaughn.

and Chauncev A. U.S. FL Cross-Country Pilot, Forced Down at Fort Wayne, Claims Record. fpriial to Thr Initio iwpulix Star. FORT WAYNE, April 5-Far from being discouraged over the forced landing he made near here today, A.

W. Mooney of Wichita (Kas.) airplane manufacturer, who was attempting to set a new nonstop coast-to-coast light airplane record, said today that he would attempt another flight in two months. Mooney was forced to land on a farm about right miles northeast of Fort Wayne at 7:12 o'clock this morning, standard time, because of a broken fuel pump bracket. The defect was repaired and the plane was flown to the Municipal airport where it was quartered tonight. Mooney will leave at noon tomorrow for Wichita.

I nalile to Find Plane. After landing this morning Mooney called a taxi and was brought to the city. After getting some sleep at a local hotel he started out in search of his plane but was not able to find it, A pilot then took him into the air from where the plane was spied. The flier left Burbank, unannounced yesterday morning and covered 1.9.V) miles in the 22 hours and 27 minutes he was in the air. Claims Record.

Although his record will be unofficial, Mooney says he set a nonstop mark for light planes. The former record was 1,000 miles, he says. He started out with one hundred and eighty-six gallons of gasoline and had fifty gallons remaining when he settled down on the farm. He was flying alone in a four-place Mooney low wing monoplane, powered by a 100-horsepower Kinnler motor. HAWKS LANDS AT BUFFALO.

Gilder Is Kxpected to Arrive in New York City This Afternoon. Bl'FFALO, N. April 5. -Capl. Frank M.

Hawks landed in Buffalo at 4:42 o'clock this afternoon on the second from last log of his glider flight from San DiegrJf to New York. He will leave here at 8 o'clock tomorrow morning, making a brief halt at F.lmira to fuel the towing plane. He expects to arrive at New York city at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Hawks left Cleveland at 2:05 o'clock this afternoon in the Texaco glider towed by a plane. It took twenty-four minutes for the glider to come down.

Hawks made a perfect landing on the concrete runway. O'URINE PLANS WORLD HOP. Endurance Flier's Goal Non-Stop Flight Around Globe. LINCOLN, April non-stop flight around the world Is now the goal of Forest O'Brine, co-holder of the world's flight endurance record. He said while here today, however, that he could not get proper equipment to make it this summer.

With icfueling planes stationed in many countries and on ships at sea, the feat might be done, he estimated, in fifteen days. "After that," he added, "There would be no thrills for me." MOO 1 Politicians Point to Lack of Interest Manager League Backs Basic Law Change. BY MAURICE KARI.Y. The smallest vote in the last decade is predicted In the primary election May 6. Politicians predicate this belief on the lack of interest being shown by the general public in the scramble of politicians for local nominations.

In a few of the districts congressional contests are scheduled which may bring out a fairly large vote. Aside from this interest the only vote pulling issues in the Hoosicr primary will be organization disputes in some of the larger cities and intense rivalry for township nominations. Spectacular Contests Missing. In every primary for the last twelve years there have been statewide contests for either United States senator or Governor nominations. Spectacular interest in contests of this sort is absent this year.

The highest officials to be nominated are representatives in Congress. Therefore, if the predictions are true, candidates for county and township offices and for the Legislature will be named by a small ma jority of the respective parties. Rn little interest has been displayen in the primary campaign, which opened officially yesterday witn tne of the neriod for filing can didacies, that proponents and op ponents of the proposal to can a convention in Indiana have already gotten under way even thnnrfi that issue is not to te seuiea until the general election Nov. 4. Manager League Joins.

The Indianapolis City Manager League has joined the organizations which propose to work lor me caun.s of a convention. Previously the League of Women Voters, the Indiana Farm Bureau and the State Federation of Labor went on record as favoring the writing of a new basic law. It had been expected that the manager league would ultimately swing into line for a convention because the leaders of that movement are now of the opinion thcat little can be accomplished in establishing the new form of municipal government unless the constitution permits home rule. But the decision of the league to jump into the constitutional convention fray at this time is interpreted as a tacit admission that this organization has no intention of working for a legislative slate, as it did two years ago. When the city manager law was declared void by the Supreme court there was some sentiment in the league to work for the writing of a new manager law at the 1931 session of the Assembly.

This apparently is to be abandoned until a way is paved for a form of municipal government which is free of legislative domination. Han Many Sympathizers. The league, while purely an Indianapolis organization, has many sympathizers in the larger cities, where there is distaste for the Federal form of government and the patronage system prevalent under the two-party system of electing officials. Arthur L. Gilliom, former attorney general, has taken the stump as a foe of the constitutional convention.

He presents as reasons for his stand that there is no need of any radical chanee in the form or structure of government in Indiana which is provided for by the constitution; that the cost of holding the convention and election for ratification would be large and that if amendments are really wanted by the people they can he effected without writing a new document. One of the chief points in his argument is that the tax provision of the constitution, which is one of the sections under the most severe fire, does not in fact probihit the enactment of an income tax. One of th reasons that the Legls- CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE. Book Review Winners Six girls and one boy took cash prizes in the eighth contest. Details on Fagc 6.

Drops Her Law Practice; Spuds Save Homestead ALLIANCE, April 5. (1') Just like the melodrama of old, the mortgage on the "old homestead" was coming due and something had to be dona about it, and so Miss Charlotte Worley set about to do it. She dropped her practice of law, donned a pair of overalls and went to work raising potatoes on her mother's ranch. Today it was learned that she recently realized $64,000 from 30,000 bushels of certified seed pota toes and that the homestead was safe from foreclosure. Bootleg Wild Horses.

LANDER, April "bootlegging" of wild horses on the range in this vicinity resulted in holding of indignation meetings of live stock men of three Wyoming counties today. Large ranch operators said that men representing themselves as agents of Eastern packing plants, who had been buying horses, have been culling out worthless stock at secret locations and turning young animals out on the range. Stockmen assert the wild horses menace the cattle and sheep industry. Army Mules Not Heroes. NEW YORK, April 5.

Ml The army mule doubtless can bear a good deal, and with composure, hut not simultaneously a fire engine and a ticker-tape snowstorm. A dozen army mules, motive power for a supply train in the Army day parade up Fifth avenue today by which New York observed the eve of the thirteenth anniversary tomorrow of the entry of the United States into the world war, entirely lost their self-control over that combination and started to charge right Into the crowd in front of the public library. Police horses helped to drive them back into the procession. And the police stopped the ticker-tape snowstorm. Nobody was hurt.

Enumerator Names Baby. KANSAS CITY, April The age-old Question "What shall we name the baby?" was settled for one family today with the arrival of a Federal census enumerator. In naming all the members of the family the head of the house wound up by saying, "and baby." explain exposition. The home and its surroundings are emphasized by bright searchlights which are focused upon it. Among out-of-state visitors was a delegation from Louisville, Ky.

Twelve realtors from that city were the guests of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board at a dinner held in the Manufacturers' building before the opening of the show. Included in the delegation were John Kesserling, C. R. Peter, M. M.

Wright, Maurice Dunn, F. A. Shonk-wiler, E. A. Rassinier, H.

M. King, B. E. Nofsinger, J. A.

Brocar, Frank J. Reck, Charles W. Hebel and John A. Braun. Poster Prl7.es to Be Given.

A special luncheon has been arranged by the Indianapolis Real Estate Board to be held tomorrow noon at the show. The members have CONTINUED OK FAGS I WO. ing that since "baby's" birth three weeks ago the family had been upset by dissension over choice of a name. "Baby" finally was listed on the enumerator's report as "Alice." $25,000 Bottle of Beer. MILWAUKEE.

April 5. The last legal bottle of beer manufactured by the Schlitz brewery before prohibition and insured as an heirloom for $25,000 by the company, occupied a position of honor among Milwaukee-made exhibits at the opening of the Milwaukee week industrial show today. Find Map, Seek Gold. PERTH, Australia, April 5. Lured by a letter they can not read and a map they can hardly understand two men have left here In the CONTINUED ON PAGI TWO, real worn.

I 74 I atuUmuttuCMM.

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