Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 98, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1929 — Page 16

PAGE 16

2 MORE STRIKE JURORS NEEDED TOL fill box Second Special Panel Is Exhausted With Only Ten Men in Box. Bu United Press CHARLOTTE, N. C.. Sept. 3. Hope that a jury to try the sixteen textile strikers on murder charges would be completed today, went glimmering when the second special panel was exhausted with only ten men in the jury box. The ten jurors are: 8. L. Caldwell, a young farmer. He sits in the jury box twirling his thumbs. A timid man. he rarely gazes at the spectators. He was one of the two who Monday refused to remQve his coat, despite the heat. J. O. McCoy, steel plant, employe, has evinced little interest since he was approved. He tips back his chair, yawns many times a day and places his hands behind his head as he gazes at veniremen. Vendor Is Most Alert Zeb Morris Jr., another farmer, 1s the dapper juryman. He is a bridegroom of three months. J. G. Campbell, a newspaper vendor, who wears a red rosebucf pinned on his necktie, is the most alert of J the jurors. Hour after hour he site in an uncomfortable position to hear questions of counsel and ruling of the court. Av. W. Martin, a carpenter, has spent many hours examining the j new trappings of the luxurious ( county courthouse. He has shown j little interest in examinations of other veniremen. J. W. Hicks, a cotton mill worker, appears to be thinking of the job he left to take up jury service. He is interested only mildly in his companions jn the box. A. F. Parker, grocer clerk, is the handsomest man on the jury. He is a member of the “true light” religious cult which believes the world will end in 1933. Nods in Chair G. L. Benson, a railway mail clerk, wears a white patch over his eye to cover discoloring. He was hit by a baseball, he says. Conrad C-. Torrence, 24. has spent twelve of these years in a textile | mill. He nodded in his chair less j than a hour after he had been selected for jury duty. G. L. Shufford, 42. is the oldest! man on the jury. He is a railway shop employe and has a daughter j employed in a hosiery mill. The last three were approved to- j day. All ten are men of modest i means but ' withal well dressed, i

STUNT FLIER IS KILLED Falls 2.700 Feet to Death When Parachute Fails to Open. B" United Press YOUNGSTOWN. N. Y„ Sept. 3. Leslie Mackay. 28. of Windsor, Ont., fell 2.700 feet to his death when his parachute failed to open. A thousand persons were gathered here at a Labor day celebration when the veteran stunt aviator went up to entertain them. Attendance Officers Meet GREENCASTLE. Ind.. Sept. 3. A meeting of school attendance officers of Wabash valley schools here was attended by Mrs. Maude Nattkemper. Mrs. Bessie Callahan and Hoss Meighan. Terre Haute; Mrs. Jessie Moore and Mrs. Nannie Summers, Brazil; Mrs. Lida Morris, Rockville: Mrs. Pauline Drake, Sullivan, and S. A. Vermillion. Greencastle. W. J. Yount, superintendent of the local schools, addressed the group. _ Stomach Strong Now; Suffered 20 Years

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Home Brewed Bu United Press NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Sept. 3.—Two policemen became suspicious when they saw a man seated, cross-legged, near a steaming cauldron in a lonely section. The flickering Are beneath the kettle cast weird shadows. Cautiously the officers approached and noted a peculiar odor. The man appeared be uttering a strange incantation as he stirred the brew. It ran like this: “Catch a cat, kill it, skin It, reduce the fat, bottle it, rub it into the joints seven times a day.” ' The man gave his name as John Resinski. He said he was trying out a recipe for rheumatism cure.

STEAMER SINKS IN GALE: 28 DIE Only Nine of Crew Rescued in Hurricane. Bu United Press MANILA. P. 1., Sept. 3.—A hurrican of typhoon propoijions swept over the Philippine islands today, sinking the steamer Mayon and flooding several provinces. The Mayon sank off Pasacao, near the Regay gulf in the Camarines Sur Province. Only nine of its crew of thirty-seven were rescued and slight hope was held for the remaining twenty-eight. The vessel was operated in inter-island service and so far as could be determined, carried no passengers. The ship was caught in the storm's vortex and sent to the bottom. Center of the typhoon was placed at a few miles north of Manila. 4 The Island of Cebu. Tayabas province, which is in the southeastern part of northern Luzon, the province of Rizal and other parts of the Philippines was devastated. Torrential rains had flooded large areas, doing great damage to crops and dwellings.

CHICAGO FLIERS PASS 250TH HOUR IN AIR Begin Eleventh Day Convinced Job Is Far From Picnic. Bn l nited Pres CHICAGO. Sept, 3.—Two Chicago endurance fliers, attempting to break the 421-hour record of the St. Louis Robin, began their eleventh day aloft today convinced that endurance flying, at its best, is no picnic. The pilots'. C. E. Steele and Russell Mossman, completed their 237th hour aloft, in the monoplane Chi-cago-We Will at 3:31 a. m. (central standard time.) “If you think 250 hours in the air isn’t a long time, you're all wee,” Steele said in a note to his ground crew. “If O’Brine and Jackson of the St. Louis Robin said they didn’t mind it, they’re crazy.” CHARGE OF PATRONAGE FRAUD TO BE SIFTED Texas G. O. P. Leader Is Accused of Grafting. Bv Scripps-Uoward Xcwspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Sept, 3.—Fred Strang, convicted Ft. Worth oil promoter, who last week started the senate patronage investigating committee on anew line of inquiry, was scheduled to resume the witness stand today. Strang accused R, B. Creager, Republican national committeeman, and other Texas Republicans of profiting from receiverships resulting from mail fraud trials. The charges will be enlarged upon today, despite denials that Strang had told a true story in his first appearance before Senator Brookhart’s committee last week.

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CHAPTER XII fContinued) Then the torches switch on and every man strikes at the heap, which scatters with a rush. The result is good. We toss the bite of rat over the parapet and again lie in wait, j Several times we repeat the process. At last the beasts get wise to It, or perhaps they have scented the blood. They return no more. Nevertheless, before morning, the remainder of the bread on the floor has been carried off. In the adjoining sector they attacked two large cats and a dog, bit them to death and devoured them. Next day there is an issue of Edamer cheese. Each man gets almost a quarter of a cheese. In one way that is all to the good, for Edamer is tasty—but in another way it is vile because the fat red balls have long been a sign of a bad time coming. Our forebodings increase as rum is served out. We drink it of course; but are not greatly comforted. For days we loaf about and make war on the rats. Ammunition and hand-grenades become more plentiful. We even overhaul the bayonets —that is to say, the ones that have a saw on the blunt edge. If the fellows over there catch a man with one of those he’s killed at sight. In the next sector some of our men were found whose noses were cut off and their eyes poked out with their own saw-bayonets. Their mouths and noses were stuffed with sawdust so that they suffocated. Some of the recruits have bayonets of this kind: we take them away and give them the ordinary kind.

But the bayonet has practically lost its importance. It is usually the fashion now to charge with bombs and spades only. The sharpened spade is a more handy and many-sided weapon; not only can it be used lor jabbing a man under the chin, but it is much better for striking with because of its greater weight: and if one hits between the neck' and shoulder it easily cleaves as far down as the chest. The bayonet, frequently jams on the thrust and then a man has to kick hard on the other fellow’s belly to pull it out again; and in the interval he may easily get one himself. And what’s more, the blade often gets broken off. At night they send over gas. We expect the attack to follow and lie with our masks on. ready to tear them off as soon as the first shadow appears. Dawn approaches without anything happening—only the everlasting. nerve-wracking roll behind the enemy lines, trains, trains, lorries, lorries; but what are they concentrating? Our artillery fires on it continually, but still it does not cease. * We have tired faces and avoid each other’s eyes. “J.t will be like the Somme,” says Kat gloomily. “There we were shelled steadily for seven days and nights.” Kat has lost all his fun since we have been here, which is bad, for Kat is an old front hog, and can smell what is coming. Only Tjaden seems pleased with the good rations and the rum; he thinks we might even go back to rest without anything happening at all. t It almost looks like it. Day after day passes. At night I squat on the listening post. Above me the rockets and parachute lights shoot up and float down again. I am cautious and tense, my heart thumps. My eyes turn again and again to the luminous dial of my watch; the

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hands will not budge. Sleep hangs on my eyelids, I work my toes in my boots in order to keep awake. Nothing happens till I am relieved: only the everlasting rolling over there. Gradually we grow calmer and play sk£t and poker continually. Perhaps we. will be lucky. All day the sky is hung with observation balloons. There is a rumor that the enemy are going to put tanks over and use low-flying planes for the attack. But that interests us less than what we hear of the new flame-throwers. We wake up in the middle of the night. The earth booms. Heavy fire is falling on us. We crouch into corners. We distinguish shells of every caliber. Each man lays nold of his things and looks again every minute to reassure himself that they are still there. The dugout heaves, the night roars and flashes. We look at each other iiLJhe momentary flashes of light and with pale faces and pressed lips shake our heads. Every man is aware of the heavy shells tearing down the parapet, rooting up the embankment and demolishing the upper layers of concrete. When a shell lands in the trench we note how the hollow, furious blast is like a blow from the paw of a raging beast of prey. Already by morning a few of the recruits are green and vomiting. They are too inexperienced. Slowly the grey light trickles into the post and pales the flashes of the shells. Morning is come. The explosion of mines mingles with the gunfire. That is the most dementing convulsion of all. The whole region where they go up becomes one grave. The reliefs go out, the observers stagger in, covered with dirt, and trembling. One lies down in silence in the corner and eats, the other, a

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reservist-reinforcement, sobs; twice he has been flung over the parapet by the blast of the explosions without getting any more than shellshock. The recruits are eyeing him. We must watch them, these things are catching, already some lips begin to quiver. It is good that it is growing daylight; perhaps the attack will come before noon. The bombardment does not diminish. It is falling in the year, too. As far as one can see it spouts fountains of mud and iron. A wide belt is being raked. The attack does not come, but tne bombardment continues. Slowly we become mute. Hardly a man speaks. We can not make ourselves understood. Our trench is almost gone. At many places it is only eighteen inches high. It is broken by holes, and craters and mountains of earth. At once it is dark. We are buried and must dig ourselves out. After an hour the entrance is clear again, and we are calmer, because we have had something to do. Our company commander scrambles in and reports that two dugouts are gone. The recruits calm themselves when they see him. He says that an attempt will be made to bring up food this evening. This sounds reassuring. No one had thought of it except Tjaden. Now the outside world seems to draw a little nearer; if food can be brought up, think the recruits, then it can’t really be so bad. % We do not abus* them: we know that food is as important as ammunition and only for that reason must be brought up. But it miscarries. A second party goes out, and it also turns back. Finally Kat tries, and even he reappears without accomplishing anything. No one gets through, not

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even a fly is small enough to get through such a barrage. We pull in our belts tighter and chew every mouthful three times as long. Still the food does not last out; we are damnably hungry. I take out a scrap of bread, eat the white and put the crust back in my knapsack; from time to time I nibble at It. CHAPTER Xin THE night is unbearable. We can not sleep, but start ahead of us and doze. Tjaden regrets that we wasted the gnawed pieces of bread on the rate. We would gladly have them again to eat, now. We are short of water, too, but not seriously yet. Towards morning, while It is still dark, there is some excitement. Through the entrance rushes in a swarm of fleeing rats that try to storm the walls. Torches light up

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the confusion. Everyone yells and curses and slaughters. The madness and despair of many haurs unloads itself in this outburst. Faces are distorted, arms strike out. the beasts scream; we just stop in time to avoid attacking one another. The onslaught ha sexhausted us. We lie down to wait again. It is a marvel that our post has had no casualties so far. It is one of the few deep dugouts.

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A corporal creeps in; he has a loaf of bread with him. Three people have had the luck to get through during the night and bring some provisions. They say the bombardment extends undiminished as far as the artillery lines. It is a mystery where the ejjemy gets all his shells. (To Be Continued) Copyright 1929, by Little. Brown <fc Cos., Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Inc.