Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1926 — Page 4
PAGE 4
RED CROSS ASKS AID FOR STORM SUFFERERS
Local Chairman Wants All to Donate at Once as Money Is Needed. An appeal for contributions, to aid persons suffering from the hurricane which swept Florida Saturday, was broadcast today by William Fortune, Indianapolis chairman of the American Red Cross. Numerous contributions have begun to pour iin already, he said. Indianapolis chapter received a call for relief from John Barton Payne, national chairman, at Washington, D. C., asking for wide publicity. Contributions should be made payable to Ff'ank D. Stalnaker* treasurer, American Legion Bldg., 777 N. Meridian', St. Fortune took steps to establish means of communication with the stricken area, to aid Indianapolis persons in getting word from relatives in Florida. The chairman appealed to J. M. Mooney, Postal Telegraph manager, and A. A. Brown, Western Union manager, to establish additional means for persons to commupiowte, \y.ith the devastated zone. M. K. Foxworthy, Merchants Heat and Light Company manager, promised aid of radio station WFBM in broadcasting the appeal for relief. He urged reports be made through the Red Cross. Establishment of a large receiving set by a local radio company to “pick up” messages of interest to Hoosiers was proposed. National staff was requested to set up booth in the devastated zone to provide information for relatives. Many appeals were received by the Red Cross to aid in locating persons. Flarence Martin, head of the nursing service committee, said a group of nurses was ready, if first aid was needed. Miss Grace Cook, registrar of central directory of nurses, ordered a staff available at call. F. R. Grimes, 2.105 N. New Jersty St., was the first to volunteer for rescue work, if such a service is needed. Grimes is familiar with Florida and will be dispatched if is ir.eeded. ! Executive committee approved plan ‘of Fortune to set up an inforimation bureau here to aid Indianla polls persons to obtain information prom relatives and friends in the Storm area. A Miss Florence Schearer of the Borne service department, is in ■harge of the booth at the Red TCross offices. Merle Sidener, local advertising man, made the first .contribution to the local fund. His gift was SIOO. Mayor Duvall named a committee of city officials to collect relief funds from city employes. The funds will be turned over to the Red Cross. Committee members are Fire Chief Jesse A. Hut >H, Police Chief Claude F. Johnson, City Attorney John K. Ruckelshaous a' J. Wolfe, member board of zoning appeals. MM SELECTS CIVIC WORKERS Multiple membership committee members were announced today by Dick Miller, campaign chairman of the Indianapolis First movement, sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce. A. Kiefer Mayer is chairman. Dan Weigle. civic evangelist, at luncheon told the new body of plans for canvassing memberships from largo business firms next week. I w address club representativ day luncheon at Tomlins' i. More than 1,200 are expec 1 . / 1. committee: II • ’ A'kins Frederic M. Ayres, Arthur B. Baxter. Joseph M. Bloch. Meier S. Block, hllian Bobbs. Louis J. Borinstein. Arthur jf. Brown, Foster Clippinger. Charles F. Doffm C. Fred Davis. Fred M. Dickerman, Bpwri an Elder. Frank E. Floyd. Frank S. fishbaok. M. C. Furseott. H. L. Goodman,' Ward H. Hackleman. O. D. Haskett. H. E. Heine. A. D. Hits, John Hook. W B. Harding. Louis C. Huesnann. John Ri Kinghan. Walter W. Kuhn. Kuril McK Landon. Clinton D. Lasher. Frank P. Manly. J. W. Atherton. H. S. King. Herman P. Lieber. G. B. Moxlev. William A. Muyborn. Charles Mayer. Albert E. Metzgvr, G. A. Millett. William I. Mooney. Sr., Robert H. Morse, Donald Morris. J. L. Mueller, Samuel Mueller, Norman A. Perry. william A. Pickens. Frank F. Powell, Leo M. Rappaport, John Ran. Harry Reid, P. C. Reilly. Robert )J. Rhoads, C. H. Roarer, A. G. Ruddell. Frederick L. Sanfrrd, Sol Bchloss. Oscar Schmidt. Merle Sidener, W. Hathaway Simnsons, Roy C. Shaneherger. L. F.rt Slack. Frank D. Stainsker, George P. Steinmetz. Elmer W. Stent, Carl A. Taylor, Guy A. Wainwright. Carl H. Wallerioh. C. E. Whiteliill. G. M. Williams, 1 Isaac Woodard. G. A. Schnull. James A. Stunrt. L. M. Wainwright, Evans Woolen
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PASS OUT DOLES AT HOLLYWOOD (Continued From Pg& 1) erishly in debris of homes and buildings seeking the dead and mained, authorities doubted if the death toll would ris to 200, as was reported shortly after the storm hit Hollywood. , First care is being given the injured in the -Hollywood Hotel -and the Parkview Hotel —show places of Florida —which have been transformed into emergency hospitals. Over 1,500 Injured Between 1,500 ar.d 2,000 injured are being treated in homes and other buildings that could be quickly made into first aid stations. The city is without lights, food and water and a call went out last night as darkness added new terrors to the frightened citizens, for medical supplies and physicians and nurses. A tiny portion of bread and a small cup of coffee was doled out to each of the homeless refuges who formed bread lines more than a block in length. The city is under martial law and American Legion* members are assisting in preserving order. No looting has, been reported. The gale which leveled Hollywood reached 120 miles an hour and shortly after the barometer had dropped to 29.01 Saturday the city was flooded. Rushed Kuildings Suffer Buildings that had been thrown up hastily to accommodate the rush of tourists suffered most. The small staff of medical men on the scene when the storm broke have worked withon* !•**• and with only the slightest nourishment. They are expected to be relieved today by doctors snd nurses from West Palm Beach, Tampa and other cities. At day break today all available man power was put to work chopping away debris. Restaurants were doing practically no regular business, but were giving warm food to physicians. As reports were received here from the stricken area Hollywood appears to have been the hardest hit. In proportion to its jlsize it suffered more than did Miami. Bodies Recovered Reports from Sebring, where a temporary field hospital and morgue have been established, said the bodies of fifty-one men, women and children who were drowned when the dam holding Lake Okeechobee collapsed had been recovered at Moorehaven. Autoists report bodies strewn along the road from Moorehaven to Clewiston. All night, trucks carrying rough boxes and food ploughed through the debris-strewed road from West Palm Beach to Hollywood. All other vehicles except those on official business were turned back. Troops with fixed bayonets patrol the roads every few hundred yards. It is impossible to move without credentials from county and city police department. One unidentified man was killed by i State trooper at Miami when caught prowling about a building. A drunk was taken into custody by another militia man in Miami, when c;\ught near the First National Bank Miami now is able to cope with the situation, city officials have advised. Relief trains bearing food and water were turned back at Miami and redirected to Hollywood, where the situation is said to he acute. In Hollywood school buMd ir.gs and churches have been blown over, hotels have been transformed into the emergency hospital and search in the debris for further victims began with the town’s surviving man-power all at work. 33 Bodies Recovered Thirty-three" bodies have been recovered there. The death list is expected to mount to at least 100. At Hallandale, near Hollywood, Mrs. H. J. Kimbell and her 2-week's old baby were drowned in an attempt to reach town from a house boat on the water front. Every member of the family were killed. They were found all huddled up in one room where they evidently had fled to escape from the driving gale which had unrooted the house a few mo- | ments hefore. j At Hialeah, Venetian Carter, 1- | year-old girl, was found in the ruins of a. Hbme by her mother as the frantic parent tore away stone and twisted timhejps with her bare hands. She collapsed on finding her baby with its head crushed by a falling concrete block. Outside of the tropical radio stations at Hialeah one family of eight lay in the Palmetto thickets, huddled together for twelve hojirs during the entire hurricane. They escaped injury. In the more exposed places between Miami and Hollywood, i houses were rolled along the ground j for hundreds of yards. The IJancost Hotel at Miami had an entire side j caved in by a huge barge which was hurled from the ocean a hundred yards away. Covered by Water Miami Beach was entirely covered by water blown in from the ocean, bay and open ocean being all one body of water. In Royal Palm Park, Miami, a huge freighter is lying 400 yards from the bay, high and dry. On E. Flagler St. bridge, Miami, more than twenty boats are packed under the structure in a huge pile |of wreckage. Miami Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables presents a picture like w<tr-torn France, Its windows are shattered and part of the tower is blown away. What once wore the city docks at Miami is now only two pieces of piling sticking from a bay swarming with debtis. Every boat anchored there either was sunk or beached. The famous Nohab, former palatial play yacht of the ex-German Kaiser, is lying on its sgde about 100 yards off shore in Miami Harbor. An unidentified man, walking i along Miami Ave., Miami, after the hurricane had subsided, was killed whsn a piece of sheet metal fell
Magnificent Hotel Said to Be in Storm Path
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The Hollywood Hotel, Hollywood, Fla., which was reported in the path of the Florida hurricane. The hotel was built by J. \V. Young, former Indianapolis man and founder of Hollywood, ut a cost of million dollars.
from a five-story building and deea|netted him. $ An unidentified girl, about 14, was found in Miami with a piece of timber driven through her chest. Half of the 300-foot smokestack of the power plant in Miami was toppled over. The courthouse lawn and vicinity looks like an armed camp. National guardsmen arrived from Palm Beach Sunday night and pitched dog tents in the heart of town. Water supply mains in Miami were turned on for a short time Sunday night, but were shut off again. Physicians decided the water was unfit to drink. Linemen from the Florida Light and Power Company, who have been "on duty since the hurricane broke over the city, are attempting to establish temporary lines to hospitals and relief centers. Call Not Issued Sheriff Chase of Miami today told the United Press he had not.issued a call for 600 coffins for the stricken city, as had been reported. “We have no need for that many coffins no wand do not expect to have,” he said. At Hollywood it was impossible t<y obtain food except by official permit from police. AH food supplies in wrecked groceries and warehouses have been confiscated by the police and are being rationed. United Press representatives, who visited Hollywood and Miami late Sunday night and early today de clare the former city was the hardest hit. Long lines of refugees, penniless, distracted and hungry, crowded all roads leaving Hollywood, the beautiful city, which in three years sprung from a mango plantation to one of the garden spots of the State. Telegraph offices are besieged by survivors seeking to send word to relatives in the north that they are safe, but at noon today wire communication was still crippled. It was six days ago that the hurricane was born out in the West Indies. It rolled westward and at 2 a. m. Saturday it broke upon Miami from the northwest. For four hours the wind roared and whirled at a velocity of 130 miles an hour. The great tower of the Miami News, famed over the world for the beauty of its architecture, leaned to a 20-degree angle, twisted and wrenched. Meyer-Kiser Building The ten-story , Meyer-Kiser bank building was practically demolished. Building after building was blown ddwn or was shattered and torn. Boats were tossed, sunk or destroyed in the harbor as if they were hut things of flimsy tissue. People were crushed, injured and killed. Wires were twisted into entanglements' such as on the battlefields of France. Lights went out. Communication was an impossibility. Railroad lines were disrupted and tracks destroyed. Rain fell in torrents. Water, banked up in the harbor by the vast power of the hurricane, swept onto the shore, wrecking what w&s in its path and leaving boats high on the land. And, while this was going on In Miami, o.ther of the magic cities of the Florida east coast were almost equal sufferers. Hollywood, perhaps the most famous of the Florida developments, was wrenched and torn. Estimates of the dead there were placed at 200 Ft. Lauderdale, hardly less famous than Hollywood, was visited with hardly less fury. Fifteen bodies have been recovered from its wreckage and the dead there may go much higher. Race Track Ruined Hialeah’sV famous race track was ruined and seventeen were reported killed. The storm swept inland over Lake Okeechobee and an aviator, who, on Sunday, flew in that vicinity, came back with an estimate that probably 140 persons had been killed in Moorhaven and Clewiston. Another man who had been over the territory said he estimated the dead along the railway between Moorehaven and Muckway at forty. Coral Gables suffered, with six reported dead. Out of Key Largo and in Homestead the hurricane visited with its fury and the dead in those communities was reported to approximate forty. Key West also suffered and
For Florida Sufferers If you wish to aid Florida hurricane sufferers fill out this coupon and mail or take it with a check, money drder or cash to: AMERICAN RED CROSS, 100 War Memorial Building, 777 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. I am sending for the FLORIDA HURRICANE SUFFERERS’ FUND. Nain% Address City I (Make checks payable to F rank D. Tree^urer.)
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Indianapolis First One street car off the track on a rainy wintery morryng. held up several car lines, halted dozens of cars laden with people bound for office, store and factory. Many were late that morning. Much work was delayed. One car off the track! I've seen the same thing happen in many places. One man, off the track, out of spirit with the policies and character of his home city, has delayed, held up, lost much business ,and good will. The same thing applies to every individual employer or clerk. It makes little difference who he is, whether he is a member of the Chamber of Commerce or not, if he is a citizen of Indianapolis with a spark of civic righteousness, he will turn his mind on this business of making “Indianapolis First.” That’s the fire that makes the steam that turns the wheels that makes Indianapolis grow. T. A. CARROLL, Adv. Mgr. E. C. Atkins & Cos.
eighteen were reported killed there. There was no tvay to tell how many had been injured. In the meantime the chaos In the stricken cities and towns Was in ta^e. Homeless people wandered the debris-filled streets. Churches, halls, homes —almost all buildings which have been left standing, in every city have been thrown open. There the homeless gather. Sunday in several sections, dead still were in the streets or beneath the wreckage where they fell. The American Legion, the Red Cross and the chamber of commerce of West Palm Beach have organized 500 relief workers to penetrate the disaster zone, carrying food and sup plies. They have mobilized every posable means of conveyance and today the drive into the Miami territory was in progress. Virtual military rule prevails in Miami and other ci ies, but there is a shortage of troops and the lack of transportation makes' the task of bringing there sufficient men to meet the situation, a difficult one. Water supplies in Miami have run low and power is virtually unavilable. Medical supplies have been practically exhausted. Disease is feared. Refugees Arrive Dazed and bewildered refugees began arriving today in West Palm Beach. They were cared for by emergency relief organizations here. It was not until late Sunday night that the situation In Hollywood was learned. Until that time that city had received no outside aid. Reports from the -(vest coast show that Tampa was lashed only by the tall of the hurrircane. One hundred thousand dollars was the damage estimated there. Tides were twisted and turned into giddy whirlpools and then rolled up in combers which stranded small craft or sunk them. The tide dropped three feeet below its normal level and then swept in four feet above the high water mark, snapping mooring cables of shipping in the harbor and flooding the shore lands. A hotel boat on the Fillslborough River was overturned and the guests were thrown into the choppy river waters. All were saved. Orlando Suffers Little Orlando suffered but little. Awnings were blown down and the citrus crop was only slightly damaged. In Clearwater three business buildings were un"Oofed and rain poured down, while the wind blew forty-five miles an hour. No lives were lost, but damage to the citrus crop, now ripening, was feared. At Lakeland, the wind blew fifty miles an hour and 10 per cent of the orange, lemon and grapefruit crop was blown from the trees. In Little River and Lemon City hardly a structure escaped damage, but the loss of life apparently was not heavy. Miami shores seemed to have suffered less than other communities in that region. In Ojus, Davie and Dania, dozens of buildings were twisted and torn and there was much the same story of desolation there as in Miami and Hollywood. The main hotel at Ft. Lauderdale
was so seriously damaged that all guests were ordered out into the still howling wind of Saturday. There the Women's Club Bldg., churches and schools became the emergency shelters for the homeless and relief organization headquarters. Coral Gables, according to persons reaching here, has been comparatively little damaged, although there were some killed and injured there Four Hours of Fury The full force of. the hurricane struck Miami at 2 a. m. Saturday, and for four hours its fury did not abate. Then its intensity slackened, but until well into the morning it still howled close to 100 miles an hour. It was estimated that the storm at its maximum was roaring over the Florida east coast for ap proximately nine hours. At 2 a. m. at Miami the barometer had read 29.25. But at 5:50 it was down to 27.25. That wits .65 of an inch lower than the barometer registered at Galveston when that city was flooded in 1900. A large portion of the damage done came after the main fury of the hurricane was spent and people began emerging from their places of refuge and feeling their waj into the streets. About 7:30 a. m. the wind's intensity increased again for a short time almost to the violence of a sec ondary hurricane, and it caught scores of those who had ventured out, completed the ruin of numerous buildings which the first storm had wrenched but had left still habitable, and further twisted the wreckage In the streets. - In Biscayne Bay, which was filled with large and small craft of all descriptions, the scene was remarkable. The wind piled up the water fifty yards ashore, overflowing the famous Boulevard, built at vast expense, and strewing it with wreckage of harbor craft. A score of boats, one a big freighter, were deposited along the shore within an area of a few hundred yards of the Royal Palm Park. The Yach Nohab, once the private yacht of Kaiser Wilhelm, was caught in the seas and the rip tides, thrown on the shore, broken in two and finally sunk. Try lo Do Business By afternoon Saturday. Miami still had not quite awakened to the realization of what had happened. People attempted to do business. Some restaurants opened up. But it was but the matter of a couple of hours before restaurant keepers realized they had no food left and could buy none. It was then that the city came to full realization of its plight. Calls for help were sent out; the writer and another newspaper correspondent were on their way to West Palm Beach with the first news of the disaster to be carried to the outside wold; and from that time on relief has been the. focus of all efforts. City Manager Takes Charge C. A. Renshaw, city manager, being unable to communicate with the Governor, took charge of the situation and declared a form of martial law under municipal direction. Prisoners from the city and county jails were ordered out to clean streets. The police department conscripted citizens to aid them. As soon as communication was possible, word was sent to Governor Martin at Tallahassee requesting that the State send troops to Miami. Hollywood and Ft. Lauderdale. Martin forwarded the request to Washington and today military order is expected to prevail. CUT ANDERSON RATES Commission Orders Reduction on Light and Power—Rais eWater. Electric light and power rates at Anderson and Logan sport, both of which cities own their plants, were ordered reduced today by the public service commission. The commission, in the Anderson order, authorized a 50 per cent increase in the water rates. Light rates at Anderson will be reduced approximately 20 per cent, thus cutting the total water \ bill about $150,000 annually. The city was ordered to pay for the current it consumes at the rate of 1% cents per kilowatt hour. A 4 ,per cent depreciation charge was approved. New rates become effective Jan. 1, 1927. The Anderson water order affects all but small, flat rate consumers. It fixed a 1 per cent depreciation allowance. / The Logansport light plant was valued at $933,750 by the commission ar.d rates predicated thereon.
Indianapolis-Chicago Parlor Motor Coach Trips Daily 8:30 a. m. Leave From. New Bns Station. Cor. N. Capitol Ave. and Market St. Arrive Chicago 5 P. M. State and Madison Sts. —Fares — , Chicago, one way $6.75 Chicago, round trip $12.00 Danville, one way $2.75 Danville, round trip $5.00 Interstate Carriers Only. For Reservations Call MA. 2265, Depot Motor Bus Lines.
ENGLAND ALSO HASASIORM Terrific Rain Falls in North Part of Country. Bu United Press LIVERPOOL. England, Sept. 20. Teriffic rain accompanied by an electrical storm fell over North England and Wales today. The storm began Sunday night. Communications were interrupted and considerable damage from flood water was reported today. An inch and a half of rain fell during the storm which was described in dispatches from Berwick-on-Tweed as the worst in the memory of living persons. ‘BABY’ BANDITS GIVENJERMS Bn United Pres <* LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y., Sept. 20.—Five members of the “cry-baby bandit gang” today were sentenced to from forty years to life imprisonment in State Prison, after their eon'viction for a $2,470 payroll holdup on July 16. The young men sentenced were Leo Hecker, Bernard Frankel, Frank Kerrigan, Peter Mahoney and Philip Oberst. James U. O’Connor, convicted on the same charge, was to have been sentenced at the same time but he collapsed as he sat in tne courtroom and sentence was deferred.
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Anew through train to Detroit and Toledo / BEGINNING SePT. 26th
Now leave Indianapolis at 10:15 on the last evening train for Detroit and Toledo—coach or sleeping car —and arrive early the next morning. Detroit or Toledo at 8:15 a.m., Eastern Time. Breakfast on the train into both cities. Early arrival for a full day's business! You time in Detroit by arriving at
WFor reservations and further information apply J. C. Millspaugh, Div. Pass. Agent, V - 610 Kahn Bldg., Telephone Main 3560, or. Y\'Bnunuw\\ City Ticket Office, 116 Monument PL, J • Telephone Main 1174 T PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD , * * ' J , * . . L ‘ .4 and Wabash Railway
1 Partial List of Injured Given
Bn United Press WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Sept. 20.—Following Is a partial list of the more sermusly injured at Miami, Hollywood and Ft. Lauderdale: G. Wendley Coofe, Miami, laceration of a foot. Byron Platt, Miami Shores, cut face and body bruises. Floyd Hazelbater, Hialeah, head cut. Mrs. Manning, face cut. Mrs. Jordan, cut hand. / Fred Gould, Legs paralyzed. Mrs. Louise Marcotte, Hialeah. S. G. Booske. Earl Hudson, crushed ribs. Mrs. Don Lawrence, spine injured. lsadore I.utzki, head bruised. Alvin McNally. J. D. Hedonsville. Fred Delaney, paralyzed. William Tom me. Mrs. Marie Conner, Hialeah, crushed legs. Robert Campbell, body bruises. Robert Pepper. C. N. Henry, body bruises. Louis Ronch. Miss Thelma Harris, right side injured. Max Sikeh, fractured right leg. J. W. Russell, cut scalp. Elizabeth Stewart, run down by automobile, extent of injuries unknown. Fred H. Grove, injured on head. A. D. Armond.. Mrs. T. C. Harless, Injured spine. Mrs. W. L. Sellers, body bruises. A. E. Bland, fractured ribs. T. W. laceration of the face. Mrs. T. E. Smith, right leg broken. Mrs. Minnie Shaw, left leg and artfi injured. J. B. Lingerfeld. cut scalp. Berl Stegell, fracture of right leg. C. H. Bryant. L. J. Delaney. Floyd Delaney. H. M. Dick. Thomas A. Montgomery. Mrs. Engstrom. Mrs. Marth Kruse. J. C. Picktron, fracture right leg and lacerated head. D. Carter. Nathan Lewis.
Tune in on WFBM Tonight Between 6:3o*ind 7:00 And Hear an Interesting Talk on Peonies by Floyd Bass COURTESY OF GREENE’S FLOWER SHOP MA In 6000-6001. Board of Trade Bldg., Meridian and Ohio.
the Fort St. Station, closer than any other to the hotels and business section. Late night train out of Detroit at 11:30 and Toledo at 11:05 a.m. lands you home at 7:10 in the morning for breakfast. And on Pennsylvania trains enjoy the fine service of the world’s greatest railroad.
SEPT. 20, 1926
G. N. Stein. Mrs. J. E. Colwell and Infant. Mrs. W. F. Duncan and baby. Lee O’Day, wife and baby. T. D. Ellis, Jr. Walter Glenn. Frederick Hudson. Maxwell Hall. R. W. Moore. Mrs. W. G. Moore. Robert McNichols. Mrs. Jennie Richie. W. G. Ramsey. Earl Roaks. Mrs. Storm. Mrs. Charles Schill. George Stein. C. I. Strickland. Henry Tevens. O. M. Roaks and wife. Mrs. W. G. Vincent. Mrs. Theil Lopa. Jack Hoggson, Jr. Alonzo Pridgeon. Mrs. Elizabeth Leidlein. H. C. McVert. Mrs. Liison, Ft. Lauderdale. Mrs. Evelyn Larson. B. Leary. Porter Longston. S. Mettzer. W. G. Moore. Miss J. J. Patte. • Mrs. Charles Almqulst. Rob G. Campbell. H. W. Crisp. S. M. Carpenter. Miss Margaret Conner. G. M. Davis. G. A. Dolan and three children. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Everle. A. R. Fisher. •R. H. Greene. C. K. Glenlander. Mrs. T. C. Harlose, Hollywood. Earl Hudron, Hollywood. Mrs. Clyde Blow. Mrs. J. O. Black. Jesse Carnegie. Mrs. Anna Thompson and baby Christiana. Healy Shock. Park P. Mclntosh. J. C. Mclntosh. , J. E. Martin, spinal injuries. Jack S. Craig, leg fracture. Carl Mays, leg broken. Mrs. Hazel Simpson, internal injuries. John Lyles. Blanche Lyles. Earl Bateman, skull fractured. Mrs. R. Evelyn McClure, skull fracured.
