Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 84, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1928 — Page 1

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CITY FACES LOSS OF PLACE ON AJRROUTE Tepre Haute May Be Chosen If Field Here Is Not Assured Soon. ASK DEFINITE ANSWER High Officials of Plane Line Confer With Local Heads. Terre Haute, and not Indianapolis, may be a stopping point on the Transcontinental Air Transport forty-eight-hour coast-to-coast airrail passenger route, according to Maj. H. C. Ferguson, consulting engineer for the T. A. T. Ferguson and Col. Paul Henderson, general mariager of the T. A. T. and vice president of National Air Transport, large air mail contractors, arrived at Indianapolis airport Monday evening by plane from Chicago. “We came here to get a definite answer on a municipal airport,” Ferguson said “If Indianapolis does not see fit to provide us with a satisfactory landing field, we propose making Terre Haute the stopping point between Columbus, Ohio, the air-rail junction, and St. Louis, Mo. Entirely Up to City "Our plans are so drawn that either Indianapolis or Terre Haute may be the first stopping point. It makes little difference to us. “If we do not get definite assurance from someone in authority that a landing field is to be prepared here this fall, in order to permit time for improving it before our route starts next April or May, we will start negotiations immediately at Terre Haute. Henderson said he had inspected Indianapolis airport,-Mars Hill, and found it satisfactory except that it should be enlarged. He said he did not plan to view other sites. Ferguson and Henderson were guests at a luncheon of airport committee members and city officials at the Chamber of Commerce. Another guest was Glenn L. Martin, head of the Martin airplane factory, one of the largest in the country, who was invited here by Col. E. S. Gorrell, Stutz Motor Car Company vice president. Martin Is considered one of the foremost authorities in the country on airports and aviation general. Confer With Harrod Henderson and Ferguson conferred with Clifford L. Harrod, Chamber of Commerce industrial commissioner, this morning in regard to the landing field situation. They assured Harrod Indianapolis would be a stopping point on the T. A. T. if they have immediate assurance a satisfactory landing field is provided this fall. The T. A. T. officials expected to confer with city councilmen following the luncheon. M&yor L. Ert Slack is out of the city and the entire council previously had accepted invitation to attend the Rotary Club luncheon. Meeting of the- maintenance and equipment committee scheduled for this afternoon was cancelled because of absence from the city of Frank H. Sparks, who with Councilman Edward W. Harris, returned Monday evening from a trip by air to Cleveland, Ohio; Buffalo, N. Y.; Toledo, Ohio, and Ft. Wayne, Ind., where they obtained municipal airport data.

SILENT ON TUBE CRASH Attorney and Company Head Wait Report of Investigations. Bn United Press NEW YORK. Aug. 28.—Neither New York’s district attorney, Joab Banton, nor Frank T. Hedley, president of the Interborough Rapid Transit subway system would venture any further comment upon the cause of the underground wreck which has cost sixteen lives. Three of the 100 injured may die. Banton said that he would wait until he had the evidence of the city transit commission and the police department, the latter report expected Wednesday. PRIMARY IN CALIFORNIA Little Interest Shown in Race By Voters. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 28.—Little interest was being shown by voters in today’s State primary election, with comparatively few citizens going to the polls this morning. The contest 'for United States Senator on the Republican ticket between Senator Hiram W. Johnson, incumbent, and Charles H. Randall, a registered prohibitionist, attracted some interest. ADMITS OHIO CRIME Tiffin Youth Gives Self Up, Con 1 fessing S7O Theft. Police are holding Oscar Nunley, 21, Tiffin, Ohio, for Ohio authorities. Nunley appeared at police headquarters Monday night and confessed to Lieut. Fred Drinkut that he stole S7O from a filling station at Tiffin, where he was employed. He came here to find work and repay the money, but could not get work, he said.

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The Indianapolis Times • Partly cloudy, thundershowers this afternoon or tonight; cooler tonight; "Wednesday, partly cloudy and cooler.

VOLUME 40—NUMBER 84

Eight Firemen Injured Fighting $75,000 Bottling Works Blaze

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Klee & Coleman Plant Fire Requires Five Hours to Extinguish. Fire swept the Klee & Coleman bottling works, 421-425 S. Delaware St., early today, causing a loss of approximately $75,000, and calling into use practically all downtown fire-fighting equipment. Dense clouds of smoke continued to pour from the building after firemen had directed torrents of water into the structure for five hours. Eight firemen were injured. They were: Lieutenant Landers, Company 3, left wrist cut; Humphrey Williams, Company 1, left hand cut; James Cox, Company 30, hand cut; William A. Hughes, Company 8, hand cut; Glen Mendell, Company 17, bruised; John R. Costello, Company 10, gash over right eye; Jack Fairhead, Company 10, hands cut; William L. Miller, Company 13, right hand and fingers cut. The majority of the injured firemen were cut by broken bottles and window glass. Mendell, Costello and Fairhead were carried from the first floor to the basement when a boiler on the third floor crashed through to the basement. ,/ Loss Set at $75,000 Dr. F. M. Fitch, assistant police surgeon, and doctors on two city ambulances, held at the scene for emergencies, treated the injured men. They insisted on staying at work, however. A. P. Klee, president of the company, said he believed the fire started from electric wiring. He estimated the damage at $75,000 all covered by insurance. Klee said he was in the building from 9 to 9:30 p. m. Monday, and Chester Waldron, foreman, was in the plant at 10:30 p. m. Neither detected any trace of fire at that time. First alarm was sounded at 3:28 a. m. Fred Kennedy, first assistant fire chief, and William T. Clune, battalion chief, arrived with the first equipment and found smoke belching from every window in the plant. Fire Chief Harry Voshell took charge when the second alarm brought additional equipment at 3:31 a. m.

Three-Story Structure The plant is valued at $150,000, Klee said. His sou, Allred Klee, and daughter, Mrs. Hazel Mack, share in the ownership of the companv. which also owns the building where the plant has been in operation forty years. The building is three stories high at the front, tapering to two stories and then to one at the rear. It is 196 feet long and 40 feet wide. Thousands of bottles and cases in the front were destroyed and records in the office damaged by five and water. A fire W'all preveuted spread ot the flames to the ruddle section where valuable bottling machinery was housed, and a second fire wail safeguarded the one -story portion where ten trucks were stored. Firemen removed the trucks undamaged. First Fire in 30 Years Second and third floors in the front of the structure blazed and collapsed, leaving the walls standing. Flames swept up through the roof. The water tower from Engine House 13 was brought into play to pour on water from above. Nine other lines W'ere laid by firemen. Details of police formed fire lines and blocked oft S. Delaware St., from South to Henry Sts. Klee returned Monday Irom Hillsdale. Mich., where he had been recuperating from an automobile accident. This was the first fire the corny pany has had fdr thirty years when bams in the rear of the present buildisg were destroyed.

BUILDING FALLS; 8 REPORTED DEAD

Ear’s How Bn United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo„ Aug. 28.—An electric magnet was used to remove a ball bearing from the ear of Loraine Fenson, 5. The child placed the bearing in her ear Sunday and pushed it down into the cavi'ty over the eardrum.

PRISON PROBE BEGUN Congress Committee Scores Cleveland Conditions. B.ij United Press CLEVELAND. Ohio, Aug. 28. Members of the prisons investigating committee authorized by Congress to investigate conditions in penal institutions of the country opened their inquiry here today with a tour of the Cleveland county jail. Members of the committee described the Cleveland jail as “a black hole of Caloutta —an abomination—a relic of medieval penology —and a disgrace to the city.”

TALKS TO TEACHERS County Institute Holds Second Meeting. Duty of the home in aiding the school, next to moulding character, is instilling a desire to learn, Superintendent John Lineberger of the Rockville schools told Marion County teachers at today’s institute session in Criminal courtroom. “Greatest reward of a teacher, “Linebarger said, “is to see improvement in a boy or girl, the growth of a desire to learn.” Following Linebarger, Mrs. Demarcus Brown delivered the first of eight travel lectures she will give during the five-day institute which opened Monday. Lee Swails, county superintendent, presided. About 300 of the 325 county teachers have registered. HAAG CASE UP SOON Alleged Slayers to Face Judge Monday. Lawrence Ghere and Rupert McDonald. charged with the murder of Wilkinson Haag. Indianapolis chain drug store official, in May 1926 in the Green Mill barbecue. E. ThirtyEighth St., w-ill be arraigned Monday before Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Arraignment date was revealed today when Judge Collins announced his calendar for September when court is reopened after a month’s vacation. Among other cases are those of Carl Skeen, for alleged murder of Mrs. Pearl Jarboe, and numerous pool selling cases. Ghere and McDonald are in jail, having been extradited from California. where they were captured this summer following a two-year manhunt. Warwick County Fair Opens Hu 7 inun Special BOONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 28. The thirty-fourth annual Warrick County fair opened here today to continue the remainder of the week. Prizes totaling SII,OOO are offered to race and exhibit winners, _

INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, AUG. 28, 1928

Firemen are shown as they continued through the morning .to pour water upon the stubborn blaze which damaged the Klee & Coleman Company bottling works, 421-425 S. Delaware St., approximately $75,000.

Bank Collapses When Retaining Wall for Excavation Caves In. B)i United Press SHELBY. N. C., Aug. 28.—A building in the business section collapsed here today. First reports said eight persons had been crushed to death. Police said eight bodies had been taken from the ruins of the building which housed the First National Bank. was feared other persons had been trapped. Two adjoining buildings were partially wrecked, it was said. According to first reports the bank building collapsed when the retention wall of an excavation caved in. INJURY PROVES FATAL Boy Hurt When Wrench Slipped, Dies in Hospital. An injury received Aug. 5 while he was helping his father, Wands Cummings, 4100 W. Sixteenth St., change an automobile tire, caused the death of Lloyd Cummings, 15, at Riley Hospital today, according to Coroner C. H. Keever. A wrench with which the father was working slipped and struck the boy on the forehead, Dr. Keever said. Although the Injury at first seemed slight, meningitis developed and caused death, the coroner said. u. b. chFrches to meet Arrangements Made for White River Parley to Open Wednesday. Sessions of the eighty-third annual White River Conference of the United Brethrgn Church will be held in the Indiana Central College gymnasium, University Heights, Wednesday. Bishop H. H. Fout will preside. Preliminary committee meetings were held this afternoon. Dr. W. E. Schell of Dayton, Ohio, general secretary of education of United Brethren Church, was to speak at a preliminary session tonight. MRS. WILSON TO SAIL Wife of Late President Leaves Tonight for Europe. Bu United Press NEW YORK. Aug. 28. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, widow of the President, will sail tonight for Europe aboard the United States liner America.

CHRIST ANARCHIST?

Blasphemy Arrest Is Ordered

BOSTON, Aug. 28.—Dr. Horace M. Kallen, of New York, widely known philosopher, will return to Boston to accept service of a warrant charging blasphemy, he telephoned today. The charge is based on a remark he is alleged to have made Thursday night in a speech in connection with Sacco Vanzetti memorial services. Kallen’s arrest is sought under a 230-year-old blue law. Kallen has decided to fight the issue, which he regards as one of fundamental importance, involving not only the characters of Sacco and Vanzetti. and the meaning of the term “anarchist,” but also the public definition of blasphemy. A stenographic report of Kallen’s speech was made public to-

PACT AGAINST WAR INDORSED BY VETERANS Unanimous Vote Refused on Kellogg Move to End Conflicts. STRUGGLE IS PREDICTED Opposing Resolution Seen Before Convention; Rice Talks. In a surprise move today the Veterans of Foreign Wars, meeting in their twenty-ninth annual encampment at the National Guard Armory, indorsed the Kellogg antiwar pact, signed in Paris Monday by representatives of fifteen nations. The indorsement was sought on unanimous v vote This, however, failed and an effort was made on the floor of the convention to sidetrack the resolution of indorsement in the resolutions committee. This, too, was halted, and after a strong fight the resolution was adopted by the delegates. There was opposition to the approval of an action which was expressed as “academic peace” and it is expected that before the convention closes an opposing resolution will be introduced. Unanimous Vote Fails The resolution declared the treaty represents “a frank and solemr. declaration against war and its attendant horrors,” but that the signing nations do not have to abolish national defense policies and that the encampment “extends through our commander in chief to the President of the United States and his secretary of State our congratulations on their distinguished and masterly statesmanship resulting in the aforesaid treaty.” The resolution and request for unanimous vote was made by George C. Travers, New York department commander. Z. L. Begin, Minneapolis, Minnesota department commander, lost his motion to send the resolution tb the resolutions committee for consideration. Jackson Fails to Appear Then Theodore Stitt of Brooklyn, former assemblyman from New York and former V. F. W. com-mander-in-chief, appealed to the organization to indorse the pact. “I highly favor the treaty,” he shouted. “The great nations have agreed not to use war. If we are in favor of peace and the treaty, say so now, don’t delay.” With this delegates arose to their feet and cheered, it being several minutes before the indorsement resolution was adopted. Governor Ed Jackson was to have addressed the convention this morning, but due to a misunderstanding as to dates he did not appear, Millard W. Rice, chief of the Disabled Veterans of the World War, declared that through the present compensation for disability arrangement only about one-third of the veterans who had justifiable claims to compensation were receiving it. Robinson to Speak “This organization should go on record in favor of a plan whereby men who have non-service connected disabilities should be treated,” Recommendations that a three lo five-year enlargement program for the organization be put into effect was made by Adjt. Gen. R B. Handy Jr. of the national offite. He said there was need for new V. F. W. posts in Southeastern and Western States. Reports were made by Handy, J. I. Billman, Kansas City, historian: Barney Yanofsky, publicity director, Kansas City, and National Patriotic Chief Walter I. Joyce of New York and James F. McFarland of Providence, R. 1., inspector general. Senator Arthur R. Robinson will speak Wednesday and Congressman Melvin Maas of St. Paul, Minn., will speak Thursday. Hourly Temperatures 7 a. m.... 70 10 a. m 82 Ba. *n.... 72 11 a. m.... 86 9 a. m...y 77 12 <noon>.. 87 1 p. m.... 88

day by the defense committee. It read, in part, as follows: “They are anarchists. Well and good. But there are two kinds of anarchists. One kind is simply a religious sect, one kind holds to a certain gospel about human nature and the structure of society, one kind is an anarchy grown out of the love of man. If Sacco and Vanzetti -sere anarchists, Jesus Christ was an anarchist If Sacco and Vanzetti were anarchists, St. Francis de Assassi was an Anarchist. Giordano Bruno was an anarchist. Thomas Jefferson was an anarchist, Abraham Lincoln was an anarchist.” Kallen’s reference to Jesus Christ forms the basis of the blasphemy charge.

Mother Left Abandoned by Family Near City After Driving From North Carolina.

SYMPATHETIC policemen today strove to help a heartbroken wife and mother lost since Friday from her husband and four children. Weary from days of searching through tourist camps in and near the city, Mrs. John Martin, 36, of Madison, North Carolina, asked police assistance at noon today. The seventy-five-acre farm of the Martins was ruined in the North Carolina floods of a few weeks ago. Packing their few salvaged belongings, the four children and the dog into the WillysKnight sedan, the husband and wife started for Indianapolis to seek work a week ago Sunday. The party reacned the eastern edge of Indianapolis Friday before nightfall. At a point which from Mrs. Martin’s description police believe to be Arlington Ave. and Washington St., Mrs. Martin got out to buy some groceries. She returned in twenty minutes to find the car, husband, the children, Woodrow 17, Lottie 13, Edna 11 and Edward 7, and the bird dog Busy, gone. The wife does not remember the license number of the car.

NORTH DAKOTA GOVERNOR DIES Arthur G. Sorlie Was in His Second Term. By United Press BISMARCK, N. D., Aug. 28.—Governor Arthur G. Sorlie of North Dakota died here at 6:45 a. m. today of heart disease. He was 54 years old and had twice been elected Governor on a Republican ticket. Mrs. Sorlie and other members of the family were at the bedside. Although no official bulletins had been issued from the Governor’s temporary home here it had been known for several days that he was near death. He was born in Albert Lea, Minn., April 26, 1874. He went to North Dakota several years ago. The death of Governor A. G. Sorlie today removed from the ranks of the non-partisan Republican faction one of the strongest advocates of State owned industries. The business man Governor was always one of the boosters of the State owned flour mill at Grand Forks which, according to a fact finding legislative committee, has cost the State millions of dollars. Sorlie was said to have upheld staunchly operation of the mill despite the loss to the tax payers of the State, on the grounds that it was “good advertising.” Sorlie was among the leaders of advocates for farm relief. When the idea of leading a caravan upon the Republican convention in June was propounded, he swung behind it enthusiastically. DOHENY AGAIN SUED Stockholders Seek Millions Lost in Oil Leases. Bn United Press LOS ANGELES, Aug. 28.—Edward L. Doheny, oil magnate, and the Pan-American Petroleum and Transport Company, have been made defendants in a $10,417,448.12 damage suit filed here by attorneys for Frank H. Hunkel and ‘ all other stockholders of the company.” The suit is designed to recover money lost by the company in the Elk Hills naval oil reserve lease.

‘HOME PADLOCK 0. K/ Mrs. Willebrandt Defends Drastic Dry Step. Bn United Press WASHINGTON. Aug. 28.—A home where liquor is sold is a saloon in effect, Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assistant United States attorney general in charge of prohibition, said today. Mrs. Willebrandt was emphatic in repudiating the suggestion that the recent action of U. S. Attorney Gifford at Minneapolis, seeking to padlock a number of dwellings, was an invasion of the Home. “Only places proven in court to be saloons—places where liquor is sold—can be padlocked,” she said. In this connection, Mrs. Willebrandt disclosed that the Government is powerless to enter a home on evidence that liquor is being manufactured there. This, which should be good news to homebrewers, is caused by the fact that the search-warrant clause of the Volstead Act applies only to sales, and not to manufacture or possession. Condemn Fire Chasers Bn United Press PLYMOUTH. Ind.. Aug. 28.-Six firemen with a truck are worth more in fighting a fire than a hundred persons with automobiles, firemen here declared in protesting against the practice of .trying to “beat the fire department to a lira,'’

Entered as Secoud-(?lass Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis

EXPLOSION PROBE CENTERS ON STORE OWNER, ABSENT FROM CITY SINCE SUNDAY Wife Indicates Traugott Left for New York in Auto With Attorney for Five Held in Machine Gun Death Quiz. BURNED VICTIM STILL IS SILENT - * Libowitz Refuses to Talk Until He Confers With Firm Proprietor for Whom Sleuths Are gearching. * Absence from the city since Sunday afternoon of Edward Traugott, part owner of the Traugott Clothing Store, today became a factor in the investigation by State and city agencies of the SIOO,OOO explosion and tire in the Traugott store and the adjoining Em-Roe Sporting Goods store, 209 to 217 "W. Washington St. ) Mrs. EdAvard Traugott, 611 E. Fifty-Second St., disclosed that Traugott had gone to New York City by automobile with Paul Scharffin, attorney. Scharffin was the attorney for five persons arrested here last week for questioning in connection with the machine gun murder of Edward J. Shannon, alias Eckerlee at Clinton, lud.

Homer Wright, alleged Louisville and St. Louis booze runner, and two women arrested, were released on bond within three hours after arrest before detectives were able to question them. Police Chief Claude M. Worley made a strong protest to Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter about this. Wright was arrested in an apartment at 1129 N. Alabama St., where Shannon formerly had lived. Traugott, detectives say, was in the apartment at the time Wright was caught. Traugott explained that he was there to get some liquor. Detectives said they found no liquor there. Flame Victim Is Silent Friends of Scharffin said he had gone to New York to meet his wife. Mrs. Traugott said Traugott had gone there to do the fall buying for the store. Police Chief Claude M. Worley disclosed that Harold Libowitz, 22, of 39 N. Jefferson Ave., whose flaming body was found behind the Traugott store just after the explosion, in refusing to talk further to detectives at city hospital late Monday had declared he did not want to say anything more “until I have * talked with Traugott." So far all efforts of police to reach Traugott by telegram have failed. Until today they had been proceeding on the assumption he had gone by train. Mrs. Traugott said she had not heard from him. Find Insurance Policies The State fire marshal’s office disclosed that insurance policies found in a box in the Traugott safe totaled $66,000. There has been no estimate of the Traugott damage since Traugott has not been reached and his partner, Harry Susman, has insisted he was not familiar enough with the store to make one, having been ill and out of active management for several months. The detectives also were pondering over facts disclosed by the A. D. T. reports from the Traugott store of Sunday afternoon and evening in their attempts to ascertain who soaked clothing with gasoline and then applied fire, resulting in the blast. They have made up their minds a deliberate effort to bum out the Traugott place was made. Rectifying mistaken accounts of the records of the American District Telegraph which gave detectives a puzzling clew, Charles T. Roache, manager of the telegraph company which affords burglar alarm protection to its clients, today detailed communications and signals exchanged between the Traugott store and the telegraph offices, 209 Lemcke Bldg., Sunday. Study Alarm Ticker “Our ticker recorded on the tape here that someone opened the store at 10 a. m. Sunday” Roache said. “Immediately after, the code signal came over the wire indicating that the store was opened by someone familiar with operation of the system. “Then, almost immediately, we received a telephone call, from the store. The person calling, who said he was ‘Eddie’ Traugott, said the store would be open all day. “Consequently, the switch was thrown off on the alarm at the store and we were relieved of any vigilance, in view of the telephone conversation. “Then about 5 p. m. someone called again from the store, saying they would be open until about 8:30 p. m. Probe Alarm at Once “I don’t know who called this time—for it was just for an extension of the time the owners wensupposed to be in the building. “At 8:45 p. m the Alarm closed,” the tape showed. That indicated that the switch bad been thrown at the store, restoring the circuit or, the burglar alarm. “Three minutes later the alarm signal was received—set off by the explosion. “The report that we paid no attention to it is grossly in error. witfrjp four minutes we had tour

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officers, Wiliam Montgomery, Ross Graham, Stewart Coleman and Frank Throndson, at the Traugott store, and two others, Charles Ax and John McVey, at the Federal Jewelry Company, two doors west, where the alarm was set off by impact of the explosion.” The tangled mass of facts before authorities was complicated by the fact that officials said they had found the A. D. T. wires cut at a point outside a skylight of the Traugott store. This might have caused the signal just before the explosion. Beside the skylight was a padded brick, four.d Monday morning, and a sharp piece of cement, to which was attached* a string. Some officials believe that after the clothing was soaked with gasoline a man, whom firemen said they saw run from an adjoining enclosure, had climbed to the fire escape, cut the wire with the cement., holding it by the string so as to escape electric shock, broken out the skylight with the padded brick and dropped the match or torch which set off the gasoline fume blast. Some officials believe the firebugs were ignorant of the power of gasoline fumes and merely had intended to set the place on fire. This theory included the supposition that Libowitz was inside and either was to have gotten out before the torch was dropped or figured he would have time to leave after the fire started. Man Found Ablaze Libowitz was found about twenty feet from the rear of the store, clothes and hair aflame, with indications he had been blown out with the rear wall. Despite the fact that he had a, key which fitted the front door of the Traugott store he has insisted in his brief talk with detectives that Traugott had given him the key because he kept his trunk in the store and sometimes desired to reach it at night and that just before the blast he had been walking in the alley when someone struck him on the head. Records of the Traugott store were held in the fire marshal’s office. Sussman was summoned to the arson division office again by Deputy Marshal Harry E. Gates, while papers in strong boxes removed from the safe were examined. Approximately S6OO in cash was found in a safe in the rear of the Traugott store Monday afternoon, and about S6O in a cash register. G. L. Pugh, representative of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, joined in the investigation today. Situation Complicated The situation further was complicated by statements of firemen from Engine House 13, first to the scene. Hearing the explosion and seeing the reflection of the blast, H. J. Keppel. captain of Pumper Company 13, called out his company. The fire engine drove up Capitol a half block to Pearl St. and found its wav blocked by a gray Auburn sedan, parked at the curb with its rear end protruding into Pearl St. Keppel raced up the sidewalk and told the man seated at the wheel to drive away from the fireplug. “He didn't move,” Keppel said, “and in turning the corner the trues caught the rear fender and bumpe.* of the parked car. throwing it up against the curb. The man jumped out and ran.” While Keppel was connecting the hose Lieut. John Doyle and William Miller found Libowitz In the alley, his clothing ablaze, pinioned face down under a heavy door. Doyle saw a man jump a fence about two doors west of the Traugott store and run. The parked Abum, it later developed. belonged to a man who was at the Indiana Theater 'with his wife. Theaters Open on Sunday tin Times Sin rial BLOOMINGTON. Ind.. Aug. 28. Open theaters on Sunday has been started here. Bloomington having been one of the few cities of its sizp in Indiana with theaters closed on Suftdey. __ „*_***,.._