Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 77, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1929 — Page 4
PAGE 4
TWO KILLED IN GRAVE DIGGERS' STRIKE DISPUTE Bullets Fly as Violence Is Started Outside Cemeteries. Bu Unit'd P"ss NEW YORK, Aug. 9 —Two men were found dead near cemeteries today, presumably an outgrowth of the grave-diggers' strike for higher wages at Calvery cemetery in Queens. Stanley Zasadzinski. 40. one of 300 Calvary cemetery grave-diggers, who walked out more than a week ago, was discovered shot to death just outside of Calvary cemetery No. 4. He was believed to have had an argument with strikebreakers, 200 of whom £ad been hired to bury bodies in trenches and such separate graves as they could dig. The body of an unidentified young man. believed to have been “taken for a ride,” was found at the entrance of Evergreen cemetery. There were several bullet wounds in the back of his head. Philip Nuninziotti, a strikebreaker, was arrested charged with firing the shot that killed Zasadzinski. The shooting is said to have occurred when Zasadzinski and about forty other strikers stoned a bus carrying strikebreakers to the cemetery. A pitched battle ensued in which several shots were fired. Police held several strikers and strikebreakers for questioning. FIRE LOSS $7,000 $1,500 Sugar Consumed in Warehouse Blaze. Pi re which broke out early today in the Central Public Warehouse Company, 610 Kentucky avenue, destroyed and damaged bags of sugar with a loss of approximately 51,500. The blaze was believed due to spontaneous combustion. Fred V. Robinson, secretary-treas-urer, said water added to the flame damage. A preliminary estimate by the fire department set the loss at i $7,000, but officials said this was excessive.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to the police as stolen belong to: Ray Westra, 1841 Zwingley avenue. Ford roadster, 747-405, from in front of office at Riverside park. Carlon Watts, Circle Motor Inn, Chevrolet coupe, 712-363, from Capitol avenue and Market street. lebah Buck. 3720 North Pennsylvania street, Oldsmobile coach, 7-016, from in front of 3720 North Pennsvlvania street. James Honner. 1143 South Keystone avenue, Ford coupe, 82-464. from Illinois and Maryland streets. H. W. Hadley, 1120 Central avenue. Butck sedan, 81-234. from Washington and Noble streets. Ralph Beam, Franklin. Ind., Oldsmobile coach, 11-955, from Franklin, Ind. Claude E. Tevis, 3423 North Chester avenue. Ford coupe, 81-212, from Maryland and Illinois streets. John L. Akard, 507 Bell street, Ford coupe, 717-248, from Market and Delaware streets. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered by the police belong to: Virgil Fredrick, 530 Chase street. Oldsmobile roadster, found at North and New Jersey streets. James Dorrell, 1129 Laurel street, Willys-Knight coupe, found at Churchman avenue and Belt railroad.
<7l}-W tumes. In black- dull and Jf!/ new Autumn browns. Rep- lggjwi tile trimming. High or meS3 a pair . . . and every ■ §
RUSSIAN WOMEN WILL ENTER ARMY'S SCHOOLS Feminine Soldiers Will Not Be Granted Favors. Bu United Prigs MOSCOW. Aug. 9.—A aemand of Ia group of Russian women for equal rights in the military service has j been partially granted, the governI ment announced today. A limited number of women will | be admissable to certain technical military schools, but will be subject to military discipline the same as the men. They will not be allowed any time off for child-birth or other special privileges. RAILWAYS ARE SUED BY THREE Plaintiffs Ask Damages, Alleging Carelessness. Three suits asking a total of $40,000 for injuries were filed today in Marion superior courts against three traction companies. Alleging permanent injuries of Robert C. Reinhardt, 1000 Noth Gale street, filed suit for $25,000 damages against the Union Traction Company of Indiana in Superior Court 5. Reinhardt charged he was hurt Oct. 14, 1927, when hit by one of the company’s cars at the North Emerson avenue crossing. He was riding a truck trailer and alleged the motorman failed to signal his approach. Wilbur Moore, address unknown, filed suit for SIO,OOO in superior Court 4 against the Indianapolis Street Railway Company. On March 31, 1929, Moore alleges he was struck by one of the company’s cars as he was turning into St. Joseph street from North Illinois street. Alleging he was injured through carelessness, Beverly Dixon, 1014 Maple street, filed a $5,000 damage suit against the Indiana Union Railway Company in superior court 4. Dixon charged he was injured June 25, 1929, while carrying track rails for the company when other employes threw rails from the top of a car to the ground, breaking his left arm. SURVIVES POISONING Woman Blames Domestic ts Troubles. Mrs. Mary Sandler, 21, of 2340 Pierson avenue, w r as recovering at the city hospital today from the effects of poison she took in a suicide attempt. She collapsed in the office of Attorney Fred Barret, 807 Odd Fellow building, after telling him of domestic troubles. She said she was married last week and that her husband had left her after his father objected to the marriage. The marriage report was denied by the young man's parents.
$6.00 “ NASHVILLE SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 SPECIAL TRAIN—PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 Lv. Indianapolis (Union Station) - - - ‘ 9.15 P. M. SUNDAY, AUGUST 11 ' LOUISVILLE & NASHVILLE RAILROAD Ar. Nashville - - - r 6.30 A. M.Jfflg? \ RETURNING 4SE Lv. Nashville - - - - - - 8.45 P, M. Special Train from Nashville will arrive in Indianapolis at an early hour Monday morning, August 12 Excursion Tickets good only in coaches on trains shown will also be sold to Elizabethtown, Horse Cave, Glasgow Jet., Cave City, Bowling Green, Franklin, Ky., and Gallatin, Tenn. • CITY TICKET OFFICE 116 Monument Place, Indianapolis, Ind. Phone—Riley 7353 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD T_ r~ t nnicvit 1 P A. NASHVII I F RAII.ROAD
140,000 STATE FARM ADDITION IS HELDJ.EGAL Attorney-General Approves Purchase of Tract of 589 Acres. Permission was given trustees of the Indiana state farm to add 589 acres to the place at a cost of $40,000, in an opinion issued today by Attorney-General James M. Ogden. The opinion was rendered upon request of Ralph Howard, superintendent of the farm. He will present it to the trustees meeting Tuesday. The plan already has the approval of Governor Harry* G. Leslie and the state finance committee. The land is needed for more extensive farming operations. Manufacturing at the farm is expected to be curtailed due to prohibition of interstate traffic in prison-made goods, according to Howard. SOUTHERNERS ARRIVE Mississippi Boosters in City Few Hours. Indianapolis today was host to 200 Mississippians who are making a good-will tour of the eastern part of the nation. The special train of eight Pullman coaches and two exhibition coaches pulled into the Union station shortly before noon and the party headed by Dennis Murphree, former Governor of Mississippi, was welcomed by Chamber of Commerce and city officials. They were welcomed by Mayor L. Ert Slack. A sixty-piece band which is accompanyink the boosters gave a concert on the Circle and the party then left for Muncie and Union City. NEGRO SENT TO FARM Drunken Driver Is Given 30-Day Term, A thirty-day state farm sentence and S2O in fines were assessed against Forest Jones, Negro, 36, of 306 West Twenty-fifth street, on charges of drunkennness and operating an auto while drunk, by Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter today. Jones was alleged to have crashed into a car driven by R. J. Peek, Greenwood, at South and Meridian streets, July 21, when Jones failed to stop at an automatic signal. The defendant is one of twentyone persons arrested since Aug. 1 in the accident prevention bureau’s campaign against alleged drunken drivers.
THE INDIAXAPOLIS TIMES
I ‘CANNIBAL BUG’ IS * FINALLY ISOLATED !l_ Illinois Pathologist Announces Success of Experiment. j Bu United Press DECATUR, 111., Aug. 9.—Dr. Berry E. Gay, pathologist at De- | catur-Macon county hospital, an- ! nounced today that he has isolated a “cannibal bug” which preys on bacteria that cause blood poisoning and kindred infections. Dr. Gay has been conducting experiments along this line for several years and his announcement said he at last has succeeded in isolating the streptococci-phage. threFbrTdges TO BEERECTED State Also Will Repair Vincennes Span. Advertisements were prepared by the state highway department today for construction of three new bridges and the repair of the one on State Road 50, over the Wabash at Vincennes. The latter bridge has a present restriction of two-ton loads. Repairs include the addition of two 72-foot spans. Action was hastened on this bridge at request of a Vincennes delegation which called on Director John J. Brown of the department last week. Two thirty-six-foot spans and one sixty-eight-foot span will be erected over the New York Central tracks on State Road 41, in Newton county. It will be necessary to remove 8.000 cubic feet of dirt before construction starts, it was announced by William T. Titus, chief engineer of the department. Other projects to be advertised are a fifty-foot bridge on State Road 67 in Delaware county and a fortyfoot one on the same road in Jay county. SCHOOL HEADS PICNIC By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Aug. 9.—One hundred township trustees and county school superintendents of the Eighth district attended the annual picnic at Mounds park here. A. P. Jones, trustee of Anderson township, was chairman of the committee.
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NEW ENGINEER ENABLES BONO MINESTO OPEN Eight Deputy Sheriffs <n Guard: Protected by Machine Guns. Having obtained the services of a nonunion hoisting engineer from Evansville, the Bono Mine Company shaft at Dana reopened tills morning under heavy guard, according to word received from mine officials by Attorney-General James M. Ogden. Ogden has had two deputy attor-neys-general aiding in the effort to keep the mine in operation. It has been closed most of the time since the worker-owners were assaulted by alleged union miners, June 28. Fifty-eight members of the'United Mine Workers of America have been arrested through the attorneygeneral’s efforts. They are charged with being members of the mob taking part in the mine riot. Wall and Hufsmith announced today that they will continue to roundup offenders for prosecution and have at least three more names for which affidavits will be sworn out. They made a trip to Illinois Tuesday to try and return a hoisting engineer to the mine, who had been frightened off by four masked men according to his story. After assuring the deputies of his return, he failed to appear and the mine remained closed until the Evansville engineer was procured today. John C. Travis, bookkeeper at the mine and ’one of the men badly beaten in the riot, told Ogden that the new hoisting engineer had been assured by other miners in the Evansville nonunion field that adequate men can be had from their group to keep the mine running. Eight deputy sheriffs have been provided by Vermillion county as guards at the mine and the shaft is- protected by machine guns, it was said. Expect 1,500 at Hunt Mayor John W. McCarty, Washington, predicted 1,500 persons will attend the annual meeting of the Southern Indiana and State Fox Hunters’ Association at Washington, Ind., Oct. 13 to 19.
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SCARFACE AL CAPONE GIVEN JAILTRANSFER Alleged Threats by Fellow Prisoners Believed Cause of Removal. Bu United Press PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9—Scarface A1 Capone, ruler of Chicago’s notorious underworld, today enjoyed a change of scenery and feels more or less at ease again. Thursday A1 secretly was trans-
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meanor convicts always are senj tenced to the county prisons and Cherry Hill, the name by which | the Eastern penitentiary is better : known, receives only those caught ! committing a felony. In previous cases, judges have ruled they could not transfer per--1 sons committed to a county prison ; for misdemeanors, but Judge John McDevitt. who issued the order for Capone's removal, declared there was nothing unusual in his action. Capone spent today, and will spend several more days, in quarantine. J Alter that he probably will be | given some work to do. At Holmesburg he idled his time i away in his cell, but conditions at ' Cherry Hill permit nearly every | prisoner to do work of some kind. ! ‘ He also will be given a number, a practice not in force in the coun- ! ty prisons.
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