Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 261, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1927 — Page 11
FEB. 5, 1927 .
STEPHEN SON SUES FOR BOAT FIRE DAMAGES
HOUSWO HAVE 01 ‘GANN GILL’ ? 0N COMMISSION Measure Also Proposes to Abolish State Public Service Body. When the Indiana Legislature re'convenes Monday the House of Representatives will have Its own ’ 'Cann bill” it present plans of Representatives Edward B. Bender (Deni.). Zionsville, and Ira A. Mendenhall (liep.)i Washington, materalize. They have in preparation a bill identical to that introduced in the Senate by Senator Howard A. Cann (Rep.), Frankfort. It calls for complete abolition of the Public Service Commission and for utilities regulation by ‘‘home rule.” Slumbers in Senate In the Senate the bill has slumbered on second reading since its introduction several weeks ago. Senator Cann has repeatedly refused to call it to the floor for debate, but announced he had no intention of changing the measure, f The House bill was announced by Bender and Mendenhall upon the heels of the announcement made by Republican Floor Leader Lemuel A. I'ittinger, Selma, that he would propose the appointment of an investigating committee to study utilities regulation and report back to the Legislature in 1929. Other utilities measures are pending and predicted and many observers declares that proposals for change will be “billed to death” and when .the session closes the commission will have been undisturbed. Election Asked In the Senate there are bills calling for an elective commission, for two-thirds Senate approval of all commissioners, for appeals of commission decisions, to the Circuit and Superior Courts and giving the commission power to deduct excessive salary expenditures from utility costs in rate makiqg. Most of the measures are still in committee. Those reported out favorably have not be:n called down for second reading and no debate on their subject-matter has been held. Public hearing on the Cann bill -a - nd the elective commission bill of •Senator Robert L. Moorhead* Indianapolis, have been held. In each case the change proposed in the measures were violently attacked by representatives of utilities.
Friday Basketball
■ (OI.I.KUK ’ But lor. 29: Franklin, 20. Franklin freshmen, 25; Butler freshmen. 20. Texas, 02: Arkansas, 29. Mississippi A. & M., 36: Ole Mississippi, Toledo, 34: Defianee, 30. Tuplane, 27; 1.. S. T'.. 2(1. Vanderbilt, 52; Middle Tenn. State Teachers, 20. Lincoln Memorial U., 28; Centre College. 27. \ New York U., 38: Georgetown. 37. American U., 30: Washington Square College. New York. 10. Washington and Lee. 30: Kentucky, 34. Georgia Teeh, 50: Alabama. 15. Puquesne, 38: John Carroll. 22. Thiel, 29: Geneva. 28. West Virginia Wesleyan, 27; Fair-mount Normal. 20. Pavia and Elkins, 50: Shepherd Col’Ylkla'homa A. and M„ 29; Kansas Aggies, 21. HIGH SCHOOL Alt. Comfort. 51 : Broad Ripple. 26. Gibault (Vincennes), 25; Cathedral (Indianapolis). 24. French Lick. 31: Jasper College. 17. Manual seconds. 25; Teeh seconds. 23. Teeh freshmen. 23: .Manual freshmen. 8. .Morton (Richmond). 30: Stoney Creek. 21. Southport seconds, 14; Cathedral seconds, 12. St. Joe (Shelbyville), 28: Richmond Catholic, 14, Bainbridge, 43: Monrovia, 39. Castleton, 31; New Augusta. 20. New Augusta girls, 17; Aeton girls,*Tl. Liz ton. 30' Avon. 27. I’rinoeton, 41: Manual, 23. Monticello. 81: Chalmers. 13. Greencastle. 32: Sullivan. 26 Hillsboro, 21; Covington. 20 Freedom. 26: Worthington, 13. Peru, -.’7; Bunker Hill 21. Amo, 25: Plainfield. 21. Seirejcville. 37: Sharpsville, 34. Ambia, 25: Karl Park. 24. Newcastle, 30; CoiineAvillc 26. Columbus, 57; Franklin. 33. Franklin Seconds. 31: Columbus Seconds. 20. Washington. 27: Vincennes. 26. Bedford. 32: Bloomington, 28. Bedford Seconds. 20; Bloomington Seconds. 13. Brook. 3k Goodland. J 7. Browngtown, 23; Salem. 19. Beech Grove, 28: Valley Mills. 22. North Madison, 21: Versailles. 15. Salem Seconds, 13; Brownstown Seconds. 11. a Jefferson (Lafayette 1. 31: Lebanon. 20. ■ Martinsville. 52; Shelbyville. 27) ■ Logansport. 41: Anderson, 25. Logansport “B.” 30: Lincoln. 26. Lyons. 27: Bloomfield, 24. Pleasantville, 30: Switz City, 20. Charlottesville, 59: Westland. 21. Westland Seconds. 21; Charlottesville Sc eonds. 15. Aurora. 20: Lawrcneelmrg, 18. , Andrews. 36; Bippus. 28. : Mentone, 21: Bourbon. 19. South Behd, 27; Elkhart. 25. Elkhart Seconds. 22; South Bend Seconds. 13. Fafrmount. 04: Alexander, 30. . Austin, 29: Madison. 18. . tteltz (Evansville), 47; Central (Evansvjlle). 45. V Froebel (Gary). 18: Rochester. 17. Rochester Seconds. 27: Beaver Bam. 17. MeCordsviUe. 38; Silent Hoosiers, 32. * Perry Central. 20: Zionsville. 24. ; Winchester, 2: Centerville. 18. Centerville Seconds, 29; Winchester Seconds, 13. Kentland, 50: Oxford. 29. ... Sunman. 20: Holton. 13. “ Alsace. 20: Sunman Seconds. 18. “i Seymour. 05: North Vernon. 20. Manchester. 58: Ptercton. 22. 4i Morgantown. 37: Greenwood. 24. 1 Hartford City. 39: Portland. 11. West Lafayette. 39: Battle Ground, 31. . Rensselaer, 38: Lowell, 35. Romney, 34; Stockwell. 22. Darlington. 22: Linden Seconds. 11.
ECZEMA a i CAN BE HEALED Kfpr Free Proof to You JQ| All I want is your name and address so I can send you a , c huTZELL free trial treatment. I want tfou just to try this treat- * d ’ HU goist ment—that’s all—just try It. That’s my only argument. I've been in the Retail Drug Business for 20 year*. I served four years as a member of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and five years as I resident of the Befall Druggists’ Association. Nearly every one in Fort Wayne known me hud knows about my successful treatment. Over Thirty-Five Thousand Men a till Jft’timen outside of Fort Wayne, have, according to their own statements. barn'Jffled by this treatment since I first made this otTer public. If yol Haye Ecremn. itch, Salt Rheum. Tetter—never mind how bad—my treatIntnt hffs healed the worst cases I ever saw—give me a chance to prove my claim. Send mes*ur name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatbent I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own cas Will be p+evt,' rv> CUT AND MAIL TODAY C.~tUiT2!ELL, Druggist, No. 5272 West Main St., Fort Wayne, Ina. I’l4<W |o£jß?:rthout cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. N Age street
EX-KLAN LEADER’S YACHT
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Here is yaclit Kbemar LI, destroyed by tire at Toledo, Ohio, in 1924, on which D. C. Stephenson is suing a New i'ork insurance company to collect §32,500 insurance.
Brook, 31; Goodland. 17. Raub, 37: Otterbein, 28. Roswell, 24: Veedersburg, 21. Crawfordsville, 32; Evansville (Bosse). 29. Hillsboro. 21: Covington, 20. Waveland, 25: Ladoga. 23. Jamestown. 45: Waynetown, 17. Dayton, 43: Advance. 38. Attica, 33; West Point. 31 (overtime!. Batesville Seconds, 10; Brookville Seconds.. 1. Muncie. 25- Marion. 14. Kokomo. 44: Frankfort. 38. Wolcott. 24: Monon. 20. Williamsport. 34: West Lebanon. 15. Wea. 20; Klondike, 12. Monitor. 39: Buck Creek. 29 Michigan City. 40: Hammond, 20 Michigan City Seconds, 18; Hammond Seconds, 15. Osgood, 31: Mooresville. l.>. Osgood Girls. 21 : Mooresville Girls, 4. Batesville. 35: Brookville, 18. Noblesville, 30: Cicero. 17. NoblasviUo Girls. 23: Sheridan Girls. 7. Vorktown, 26: Daleville. 24. Saratoga. 28i Green Township. 15. Summitville. 31: Jonesboro. 24. Union City. 35: Ridgeville. 28. 11-dkey. 43: Pennviue. 29. Dunkirk. 31: Selma. 19. Lancaster Center. .38: Rock Creek, 20. Bluffton. 27: Montpelier 24. Fairmount. 04: Alexandria. 30. Warren. 28: Van Burcn, 23. Chester Center. 50: Monroe. 0. Os.-iau, 45: Union, 38. , Butler. 55: Ashley 22. Harlan, 38: Leo. 31. Angola. 41 ; Kendallyille. 29. I Central (Ft. Wayne). 51: Auburn. 27. New Haven. 38: Roanoke. 30. Garfield (Terre Haute), 21-; Gerstmeycr (I'm- Haute). 12. Wiley (Terre Haute', 32; Normal High iTerre Haute), 17. i Huntingtoo. 45: Columbia City. 83. .Monroe City. 32: Petersburg. 23. Petersburg Girls. 48: Francisco Girls. .. Decatur Catholic, 44; Huntington Cath- . min. 10. ;- airniount. 04: Alexandria, 30. | Cas City. 41 : Swnyzce, 32. Burlington. 39: Little Jeff. 34. •'crest, 88: Miehigantown. 29. [ Converse. 35: Union Township, 24. last Chicago. 40: Tipton. 24 • ora. 18: West Middleton. 31. dusdaville, 00: New London. 41. ; -heentown. 39: Howard Township. 25. ’loyal Center. 30: Young America. 24. 'J’indfall, 24: Kempton, 17, Rosedale. 17: Conoannon. 10. | . asonville. 2ft: Hymera. 21. Monroe City. 32: Petersburg, 23. Riley. 29: Staunton. 27. Montezuma. 42: Rockville. 29. Clinton. 17: Paris (III.), 10. RUSSIAN STAGES 1,000 BURGLARIES Poses as Idiot, Making Record in Six Years. tin f n ilnl Prem NYITRA, Czechoslovakia, Feb. 5. I —One thousand successful burglaries I in less than six years, or an average • of more than three each week, is the ! record of Ivan Barilov, a Russian : emigre, who has jujst begun a year’s I jail sentence here. Barilov’s method was unique. He ; pretended to be an idiot who had lost j his mind, due to hardships inflicted ; on him by the Bolsheviks before he | was able to flee from Russia. He l would never discuss any other quesjTion except Communism, the Tcheka, ! and “the Russian murderers.” For : this reason he was looked upon as a j harmless imbecile by everyone who l lived in the various villages in which lie plied his trade. No one ever once thought of associating him with burglaries although they occurred in rapid succession, sometimes three ! or four in one day, soon after his 1 arrival in any locality. NEW VETS' INSURANCE ; Ex-Soldiers Given l hanee at One of Seven Policies. | The United .States Government has made it possible for all veterans of the World War, who have allowed their war risk insurance to lapse, and who are in good health or who have war disabilities, to reinstate their insurance. President Coolidge has issued a proclamation setting aside this week as a period during which special attention is to be given to the matter. The Government has provided for seven standard life insurance policies, each of which is issued at a low premium rate and containing liberal provisions for death disability, cash surrender, paid up insurance, loans and extended insurance. The low rates are made possible, because the Government defrays the cost of administration, and the excess mortality and disability costs incident to the hazards of war. Such costs are not borne by the policy holders. This insurance must be reinstated and converted on or before July 2.
Heads Education Committee
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Representative Oscar A. Ahlgreu. Lake County, lias the distinction of iieing tfio author of the first measure passed by this Legislature to be signed by the Goveinor. lie also was ro-author of the second.
AIR FATALITIES CAUSE PROTEST, British Public Aroused Over Mounting Toll. Eli Tutted Premt LONDON. Feb. R.—British public opinion is much aroused over the mounting death toll in the Royal Air Force, which in the first eleven months of last year cost eighty-one lives and fifty-one accidents. Fifteen of these deaths occurred in three accidents. In addition many more pilots were seriously injured in 230 crashes in which all the machines were so badly wrecked as to be beyond repair. In a written reply tp criticism of the Air Force, Sir Samuel Iloare, secretary for air, stated: “In spite of continuous and careful scrutiny of every individual accident no general caure can be assigned. Many accidents are the result of a combination of causes. A mechanical failure containing no clement of danger in itself, but necessitating a bad landing, may be followed l*y a crash due to bad ground or an error of judgment. • “Every endeavor is being made to evolve more controllable machines and mechanical devices designed to increase the safety of flying. Parachutes have' been generally introduced and have saved several lives this year. But it should also bo remembered that aircraft are constantly improving in performance and every addition to speed and power tends to make tho result of an accident serious.” GIANTS MELONS WASHINGTON, Feb. s.—Water melons grown in the Turkestan, along the Tigris river, have under special conditions, reached the remarkable weight of 275 pounds, according to a Department of Agriculture bulletin. Melons weighing more than 125 pounds are rare in the United States.
Locomobile Agency Opens New Sales Room
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Above is shown the new salesrooms of the Indiana Locomobile Company, at 1525 X., Meridian St., whieli was opened today, when the agency celebrated its first anniversary. The new Locomobile mode! 8-66 will be on display ifext week, according <o George Simller, head of the agency. He also stated that no liOcomohile sold here in 1926 has been sold or traded in on other makes. A service and parts department is maintained in the new place, under the supervision of Paul Baumhofer. IV. K. Smith, Paul Leach and A. JH. - Culley are,new members of the sales staff.
THE IiiDIAN TIMES
; Y. W. C. A. Notes BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Miss Louise Ross will preside at j tlie business women's committee | meeting Monday at 12T5 at the Y. j \V. C. A. Miss Pearl Forsyth will j report the Washington peace conj ference which she attended in De- ; cernber. The Y. B. W. C. and Ama-Theta ; Clubs will have dinner at the Y. W. I C. A. Tuesday evening, in charge j of the Ama-Theta girls. ; Tho State business women’s con- | ference will be held here the second week-end in March. Miss Hazel Mor- | r : s, the State chairman, is in charge. ; More than 350 delegates are ex- | pected. INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT Miss Opal Boston was elected • president of the industrial depart- | ment of the Y. W. C. A. Wednesday | to succeed Miss Violet lan Note, i Other officers: Miss Erma Day, vice ; president; Miss Glena Nail, secretary, and Mabel Morris, treasurer, j Officers will be installed Feb. 16. A bunco party will be held next | Wednesday evening. The advanced | group will attend the international j friendship dinner. Thursday night tlie student industrial group will hear Powers llapgood speak on “Coal Mining in Europe." The interracial group will meet Friday to hear Dr. Alva W. Taylor and James Meyers speak. New officers of the Do Chi Ivi Club composed of employees of the Indianapolis Glove Company are: President, Ruth Lee: vice president. Mary Craig; secretary and treasurer, Kathryn Scott. A costume valentine party were given at the Y. W. C. A. Saturday. The W. W. Club composed of cm- ; ployes of the Woolworth Five and I Ten-Cent Store, elected: Miss Gladys i Champlain, president; Mildred Burigess, vice president: Jennie Jenkins, f secretary, and Henrietta Cull, treasi urer. The club will meet every Wednesday night. New officers of the Ho* Cite’ Ra Club composed of employes from various Industries, stores and offices of the city .are Mary Ruth Sipple, president; Kata Schabow, secretary, and Betty Reider, treasurer. This club is open to any employed girl in the city. Girl Reserve Notes Miss Carrie E. Scott of the Public Library will give a book talk Tuesday, at the meeting of Grade School Number 25 Girl Reserve Club at the South Side Branch. Miss Margaret Our is president. Grade School Club 31 is giving a play “America for Americans at the Parent-Teacher meeting 'Wednesday night. Valentine party will bo *feiven Saturday, at South Side Y. M. C. A. Club No. 45 will give a guest Valentine ijarty Friday at tlie school building. Mary Buckler, president, and Alice Bassler, are in charge. Club No. 78 will lrold its Valentine party Thursday. HEALTH DEPARTMENT The Y. W. C. A. basketball team will play the Hawthorne girls at 7 p. m. Monday. The health education, department committee will meet Friday at 11 a. m. in the gym office. The swimmers will hold a Valentine supper Monday evening. Supper will be served nt 6 p. m. followed by a program and free swim. Announcement The student council meeting has been postponed to Friday. Following election of officers, the club will attend the “World Friendship Week” program. World friendship committee will not meet this week. A girl golfer, a ball that had fallen into the water, fished up an oyster containing a SSOO pearl from a Scottish river.
Asks $32,500. He Says Is Due on Yacht Insurance Policies. DESTROYED AT TOLEDO Accused ‘Enemies’ of Starting Flames. D. <*. Stephenson, former Indiana Klan grand dragon, who is now a life prisoner in the Indiana State Prison at Michigan City, filed suit in Federal Court, today seeking $32,300 from the Home Insurance Company, New .York City. Tlie 432.500 is due him because ho ! carried insurance policies for $25,000 on liis yacht Roeniar 11, destroyed by fire in the lagoon of tlie Toledo (Ohio) Yacht Club, June 27, 1924, with the company, the suit said. Others Paid According to the suit the yacht was worth $85,000 and Stephenson carried $65,000 insurance with various companies. The other companies have paid th claims, lie said. The Home Company policies for $20,000 on the hull and $5,000 on equipment weie written by the Richardt agency, Evansville, Ind., he said. Thes uit petition filed by Attorneys Lloyd O. Hill and Paul P*. Newman, said the company has tho policies in its possession. Interest at 6 j>er cent, making the $32,500 total, was asked on the $25,000 claims. At the time of the burning of the yacht Stephenson accused his “enemies” of setting fire to the boat. , Entertain Delegates The boat figured much in the activities of Stephenson at the Republican national convention at Cleveland a few weeks before it was burned. Stephenson, it is said, was advocating'the nomination of Senator James E. Watson as Vice President and would entertain delegates on the boat in the evening after the heat of the d;iy sessions. Stephenson's Irvington home, 5432 Irvington Ave., was damaged by fire shortly after his arrest for the murder of Miss Madge Overholtzer, 28, of 5802 Irvington Ave., in April, [1925. He also accused his enemies of starting that blaze. Indictments charging Earl KlinektEarl Gentry and Stephenson with conspiracy to commit arson in connection with that fire, however, are still pending in Criminal Court. ARACKS THEORY ON ‘HAWN MAN’ Scientist Denies First Ancestor Idea. Bij United Pres* CAMBRIDGE. Jlnss., Feb. s.—The 6,000,000-year-old “dawn man,” heralded by some scientists as. “man's first ancestor,” cannot rightfully be called such, according to Prof. Kirtley F. Mather, Harvard geologist. “Man is an evolved being and so is the monkey,” said Dr. Mather. “At some place way btick in the dim past their geneological trails crossed. The 'dawn man’ is a separate offshoot from the common tree, neither man or monkey, but related to both. “The ‘dawn man’ lived 6,000,000 years ago. Tho ancestors of man were in existence long before that. True, we have no skeletons as yet of older date, but there is evidence of evolution in whnt we have found. Hence, we logically assume that there was evolution prior to the ‘dawn man.’ ” HOOSIERS VICTIMIZED? CHICAGO, Fob. s.—Five young men, all under 30 years of age, were held today on the charge that they swindled sc res of citizens in Michigan, Indiana. Illinois and lowa out of approximately $200,000. It is charged ' the men telephoned their victims, offered them highly reputable stock, sent agents to interest them further, and then accepted money as margin on tho stock. Neither the stock nor the young men were ever seen again by the victims. The five are Edward Schulman, 22; William Matthews, 24: George Zeman, 24; Sol Lefton, and Harry all of Chicago. THIRTY YEARS IN ARMY ‘ PORTLAND, Me., Feb. 4.—Retired after more than thirty years as an enlisted man in the United States Army, Sergt. Harry Cohen is about to embark on a busines scarcer. He intends to gejjf into the real estate business in Florida.
Out-Peggying Peggy
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After a (hree-day courtship, Constance Almy, dancer at 7lie Silver Slipper Club at .Miami Beach, Fla., is engaged to Stanley Comstock, wealthy Detroiter, who had been reported as the latest fiance of I’cggy Hopkins Joyce. Smiles are Miss Almy's and Comstock’s reply here to questions concerning liis former wife’s charges that his divorce .was illegally obtained.
INHERITED ASTOR PROPERTY SOLD Hotel in New York Last Parcel Relinquished. Bu t utted Pres .l NEW YORK, Feb. s.—The last of the properties Vincent Astor inherited from his father. Col. John Jacob Astor, has passed out of his hands with the sale of the Hotel St. Regis, at Fifth Ave. and Fifty-Fifth St. • The property was sold to tlie Durham Jiealty Corporation, a holding company for the Duke interests, it was announced by the holding group. The price was not revealed. The property, however, was assessed for $4,310,000. The Duke interests plan to begin constructibn of an addition to cost $2,000,000 immediately. For the past few years, since office buildings started skyrocketing toward Manhattan's skies, Vincent Astor has steadily disposed of his inherited hotel properties and specialized in office buildings. He has increased his realty rmldings. by 25 l>er cent and now owns £BO parcels of Manhattan property, scattered from the Battery to the Bronx. MRS BROWNTO SPEAK SUNDAY *ln Livingston’s Footsteps’ to Be Topic. Mrs. Demarchus Brown, iecEurer, will address the “Big Meeting” at English’s Sunday nt 3 p. m. on “In the Footsteps of Livingston.” This lecture is based on actual experiences of Mrs. Brown In following the main routes of Livingston in Africa. , Following mass singing Mrs. Roy Evans and Morrison Davis will sing. ENGAGED TO COUNT PARIS, Feb. s.—Announcement of the engagement of Count Gaston de Bearn, of Paris, to Monica Avery, daughter of the late Sir William Avery of England, was made recently. Both are 19. The Count is the son of the Prince de Bearn and de Chalais and the late Princess de Bearn, daughter of the late Ross Winans of Baltimore. The ceremony is to take place in March. •
The Responsibility of International Motor Trucks
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International Harvester Company i of America INCORPORATED
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IMPROVEMENTS IN POULTRY BRANCH Orchestra Draws Crowds on Opening Day. Improvements in the live poultry department at the city market opened today, make it one of tlie finest and most sanitary in the Middle-West, according to C. W. Lohman, assistant market master. Old wooden cages have been replaced by sanitary metal coops. These are arranged in batteries of eight, each accommodating 250 to 350 pounds of poultry. With fifty-two of these units the capacity of the live poultry market is 19,200 pounds of poultry. In the fruit and vegetable market CSK plants were the only new offering, at 40 to 50 cents each. Strawberries advanced to $1 a quart, mushrooms to SO cents a pound and French endive to 50 cents a pound. Large tangerines sold for 60 cents a dozen and green beans dropped to 50 cents a pound.
PAV^RfDF Payments as Low as $1 a Week THE UNION TIRE CO. Geo. Medlam, Pres. MA in 6273 Cor. S. 111. and Georgia St. Open Till 8:00 p. m.
AUTO SHOW BUILDING FAIR GROUNDS InJtanZZ 1 DAILY FEB. 14-19 aS 32 \ 10:30 a. in. to 10:30 p. n, ■ i |l The Newest in Cars, .fa lj||, 0 Trucks and Accessories HUSK O’HARE Anil Ills Greatest Band Adults, 50c Free Inside Parking Children, 2Sc for 5,000 Cars
placements. The 125 Confpany-owned branch houses, located in principal cities throughout the country, make permanently available to all owners those extensive service facilities which have an actual cash value to International owners. Long and successful manufacturing experience, coupled with a sound engineering policy and unusual workmanship, has enabled International to establish many remarkable performance records. International trucks have been built for over twenty years. The manufacturing activity of the Harvester organization extends back almost r century. International products have always been recognized for their genuine merit and the service behind them.
HIT-RUN DRIVER ELUDES POLICE - AFTER ACCIDENT Morton Morgan, 63, Struck by Fleeing Motorist — In City Hospital. Police were yn the trail of an alleged “hit-and-run” driver today that struck Morton Morgan, 63, of 12u L. St. Clair St., at Delaware and St. Clair Sts. Morgan, sent to tlie city hospital by police, jumped from tho path of an auto driven by Donald Jameson, 36, of 4644 Central Ave., and in doing so lost his balance and fell into the street. Jameson stopped and saw Morgan struck by tlie auto following his oar. He gave police the license number. Morgan is not seriously injured, according to police. Kennard Vogel, 23, of 813 River Ave., was injured Friday night when his auto was struck by and inbound T. H„ I. & E., Terre Haute division, traction car at Oliver Ave. and White River bridge, lie was taken to city hospital. John Snoddy, 2517 N. Talbott Ave., was motorman. Florence Carpenter, Negro, 58, of 635 Torbett Ave., is in a critical condition at the city hospital. Police said she stepped into the path of an auto driven by G. W. Woods, 329 Cable St., at Senate and Indiana Aves. George Goss, 3S, a roomer at 130 W. Vermont St., was Injured about tlie head in a, fall at his home early today and was treated at city hospital. An army mule which had strayed away from an army post in Panama was discovered forty-seven days later in a ten-foot hole, with saddle and bridle still on. ITo had lived on the vegetation in tlie hole and such water as fell his way.
FORD. Government. new. delivery bodies. ¥ls. Fits nny model chassis. Cost Government $125 to produce. Not a slip-on body. Complete with two rear fenders. Garage. 43 W. Walnut St. 14 here W aslilnuton Crosses Delaware.
BATTERIES on CREDIT $2 DOWN $1 WEEK j 6-n i,.9s 6|,11 GUARANTEED f<% ■ *3 18 MONTHS * Other Sizes In Proportion FKF.K SERVICE Open Evenlnts Till 8 Public Service Tire Company 118 E. New Vork Bt. Main 2313
.jS Direct Factory Breach ■SMtg Indianapolis, Ind*
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