Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 188, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1926 — Page 10
PAGE 10
OFFICER KILLS GASOLINE BANDIT Second Man Seriously Wounds Patrolman. tv United Press SOUTH BEND, Incl., Nov. 12. a eter Rudynski, South Bend policepan, shot It out with two filling sta-. ion bandits Thursday night and tolay one of the bandits was dead >nd Rudynski lay seriously wound'd in a hospital here. Corning upon the two bandits as hey were robbing their sixth tilling •tation, Rudynski opened fire and leorge Moore, 35. dropped dead. Moore’s companion returned Ru- : lynski’s fire and one bullet struck | uni in the chest. The policeman's | adge deflected the bullet enough to i eep it from piercing his heart. The second bandit escaped after founding Rudynski. AWARD PUZZLES SHAW 'in United Press LONDON, Nov. 12.—George Bariard Shaw thinks he must have won he 1925 Nobel prize for literature ecause he wrote nothing in that ear. Shaw was puzzled hy the ward, which was announced in Stockholm Thursday.
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TAKES ‘ARRESTFUL’ TRIP Officer on Way to Get Motorist, Nabs Three Others. Sergt. Frank Owens of the accident prevention bureau arrested three auto traffic violators Thursday while on the way to arrest a fourth man, Albert Haeberle, 1501 N. Capitol Ave., for failure to stop after an accident. At Washington and Alabama Sts. Virgil Jones, 35, Negro, 35 N. East St., is alleged to have ran his car past the stop signal and was struck by another automobile. Both cars were wrecked. At Mkrket and Alabama St. William McNeely, 21, of 3026 Ralston St., was arrested after he drove his car through a safety zone, barely missing a woman pedestrian. Mrs. S. A. Green, 34, of 2864 Ruckle St., was arrested at North and Alabama Sts. for reckless driving. LAD. 4. SHOT TO DEATH Brother, 6, Unable to Explain Fatal Accident. Bu United Press GREENSBURG, Ind.’, Nov. 12. Elvin Abplanalp. 6, tdteay was unable to explain the accident in which his 4-year-old brother, Howard, was killed. The two boys were playing with a shotgun in the barn at their parents home when the weapon was discharged. The shot struck Howard at close range and almost severed i bis head from his body.
150 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST.
‘STRIKERS’ PUNISHED Hanover Students Placed on Probation. Bil United Press HANOVER, Ind., Nov. 12.—Punishment is to be meted out for the strike of Hanover College students by placing a number of the participants on probation, it was announced today following a meeting of the board of trustees. Names of the students against whom thi punitive measure had been ordered was withheld, but it was understood several of the ringleaders of the walk-out were among those slated for probation. Practically all of the students went on strike early in the term when the faculty attempted to revive an old rule prohibiting girl students fi’bm being absent from their rooming houses after 6 p. m. except for official college social events. POULTRY AND PET SHOW | The eighteenth annual Poultry and Pet Stock Show wTll be held in the Coliseum Bldg., at Chicago, Dec. 9 to 13, it was announced today by Theo Hewes of this city, secretary and general manager of the exhibition. Hewes left Thursday to make preparations for the show. He announced that radio broadcasting service of interest to farmers will be given throughout the exposition. Charles G. Pape of Ft. Wayne, Ind., is president and general t. superintendent of the exposition.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RIVER DEATH PROBED Retired Merchant’s Hotly Found in Water. Bit United Press COLUMBUS, Ind., Nov. 12.—The Bartholomew County coroner today held an inquest into the death of Charles Sergeant, 65, retired merchant, whose body was found in eighteen inches of water in the Flatrock River near here. AGES TOTAL 271 YEARS Bn United Press ELGIN, 111., Nov. 12.—'The combined age of the four children of Mrs. Kate Shields, Elgin’s oldest resident is 271 years. The children, Alfred and Albert, twins, 68; James, 75, and Mrs, Henry Kramer, 60, came be 1 - *o help the old lady celebrate her 103rd birthday anI niversary. FAST TIME IS MADE CoolidßP Specif., Reaches Columbus Fifteen Minutes Early. Bv United Press COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 12. President Coolidge's special train, en route from Kansas City to Washington, passed through Columbus at 10 o’clock this morning. The train was running about fifteen minutes ahead of schedule. The President and Mrs. Coolldge were greeted by a small crowd at the station here. They had breakfast two hours earlier.
DYKES PROTEST BANKSOF TIBER Engineers Declare Rome Is Now Floodproof. ROME, Nov. 12.—Rome, which for centuries hass uffered from inundations of the Tiber, will, according to Italian engineers, be made floodproof by the government’s construction of additional dykes along the banks of the river. Work on the dykes will begin in a few months, while their completion must be accomplished within the next two years. Government engineers say that the present dykes are too short and that the construction of the new nas become a necessity due to the ex-
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tensive growth of the city during the past decade. The new dykes, like those built under the Aventine Hill, will architecturally conform with the historic structures which line the banks of the river. A wide walk or quay will be built among the dykes to protect them against the powerful current and corrosive whirlpools which constantly undermine the banks. A three arch bridge, to be called “Littorio bridge" is being constructed to unite the new Ministry of the Navy, also under construction, with the modern Piazza d’Arml -esi dential section on the other side of the r<ver. The bridge will be opened for traffic in 1929. The city’s growth has also rendered the present drainage system insufficient for its needs. The government is planning to lay-twenty-five miles of drainage pipes which find their outlet in the Tiber. for corns, grip or infmknza and aa a Preventive, take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. A Safe and Proven Remedy. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove, 30c. —Advertisement.
RUSSIA DENIES WAR AID Leader Says No Supplies or Money Sent China Belligerents. Bu United Press SHANGHAI, China. Nov. 12. “The Soviet Government of Russia has not given a single kopec to the warring factions of China, nor has it sent a single bullet of shell to assist any faction, concerned in the present qivil war,’’ said M. Kharkhan, Soviet Minuister to China, when he was in Shanghai recently. “Although we sympathize with the national aspirations of this great oriental power, we are not in a position to aid it, for Moscow needs money worse than does China,” he added. The Russian representative admitted that trade unions of Russia have helped British trade unions during the coal strike, but this, he said, was not inspired by a governmental policy. “We have taken the first step In furthering China’s national desires by voluntarily relinquishing our ex-
NOV. 12, 1926
tra-territorial rights, and 100,000 Russians are living and doing business under Chinese laws in the Celestial Empire,” he said.
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