Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 October 1929 — Page 1
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CLEMENCEAU RALLIES FROM HEART ATTACK 1 . France’s Indomitable ‘Tiger’ Fights (fff Clutch of Death. , OXYGEN SAVES LIFE Eleven Treatments Given From Seizure Until Recovery. BY RALPH HEINZEN I'nited Staff Correspondent PARIS. Oct. 21.—Georges Clemenceau, the indomitable, fought off death today and rallied from a heart attack that almost ended his great career. The aged “tiger,” who was the bulwark of France during the war, refused stubbornly to submit to his greatest enemy, when all during the night he lay gasping for breath and w r as kept alive by injections of camphor and oxygen. “It’s not for this time,” he whispered to Dr. Charles Laubry, the eminent heart specialist, as he rallied after five administration of oxygen. Spirit Overcomes Age Then, his marvelous spirit and sturdy physique overcoming the handicap of his 88 years and his weakened heart, Clemenceau was able to be moved to a chair, the sitting position giving him relief from the choking, smothering sensation of his ailment. The heart condition is complicated by a slight pulmonary congestion. In all, eleven oxygen treatments had been given from the time of Clemenceau’s seizure Sunday night until today. Dr. Landry, leaving his patient temporarily, said ,piemenceau was holding up well. He warned, however, that the patient must be watched closely, as anotheattack migh occur at any time. The Clemenceau household, at 8 Rue Franklin, after the anxiety of the night, was more optimistic and held hope that the “Tiger" would [ recover. When the doctors left this i morning, the former premier was in j his favorite lounge chair, scowling. Shows Improvement Deputy Georges Mandel visited Clemenceau this afternoon. He reported that the Tiger t showed improvement, but hi§ condition was ; disquieting. Further injections of camphorol were given during the morning to regularize the heart. It was recalled that Clemenceau still carries a bullet in his back irom an attempted assassination ten years ago. Dr. Jean Walser, the specialist who has been administering the ; camphor injections, after half an j hour with Clemenceau announced this afternoon that the heart ap- J peared to be stronger. The patient ; was still taking oxygen. Congestion j continued in the right lung and a ventous, or cupping glass, was applied. Dr. Walser said he thought Clemenceau had a good chance of recovery. DAM POWER ALLOTTED Metropolitan California Awarded Half in Boulder Project. Br/ T'nited Press WASHINGTON, Oct, 21—Secretary of Interior Wilbur today formally allocated Boulder dam power, gave 50 per cent to the metropolitan district of southern California, I 25 per cent to Los Angeles and 25 I per cent to the Southern California ! Edison and associated companies, j The allotments were made sub- j Ject to deductions which may be made later for Nevada. Arizona and j certain cities whose applications have not yet been received. STATE FOREST BURNS Eight Acres of Trees In Clark County Are Destroyed. A forest fire destroyed eight acres ; of state forest near Henryville, m Clark county, before it was ex- j tinguished today, according to the | department of conservation. Ten men battled the fire from I Saturday until today. Another blaze j swept 200$icres of wooded land in Bartholomew Saturday.
‘No Harm in Drinking —I Do It,’ Declares Blease
Hu rniti-4 I'rrtM WASHINGTON. 0;t. 21. Cole B’.ease. picturesque senator from South Carolina, a political dry. entertained an audience in Washington's open forum Sunday afternoon with his personal views on prohibition, which include, as a cardinal point, that it i no crime to take a?drink. The senator admitted he takes one occasionally himself. • It's no crime to take a drink,” he declared. "If it was, I should be arrested every now and then myself. The law as applied to one should be applied to aIL”
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volume; 4i—number 139
Sinclair Lewis Paints Vivid Picture of ‘Bloody Marion ’
Jill VjKX y if. m By. f jgjilSjr W
Sinclair Lewis
This it thf first r.f a scries by Sinclair jUewis. noted author of "Main Street.” on strike conditions at Marion. N. C., in which six have hem killed and fkenty wounded. Lewis was sent to Marlon by The Times and other Scrlpps-Howard newspaper*. BY SINCLAIR LEWIS fCoovrleht. 1929. bv Tlie Times) THE history of the strike at the Marion Manufacturing Comany and the Clinchfield Mills, at Marion, N. C„ is told here. It is the strike in which deputy sheriffs fired upon textile mill workers, with the unfortunate result that five, so far, are dead, and more than twenty are wounded. Early in 1929, there was trouble at these mills. Three or four malicious workers said that wages 170 PERSONS GO ALOFT IN PLANE German Ship Up fer Hour, Carrying 52 Tens. n ,, >;•..> r. r .** ALTENRHEIN. Switzerland, Oct. 21.—The mighty Dornier flying boat DOX soared in wide circles over Lake Constance today, carrying 169 persons on a record-breaking load test. It was the greatest number of persons ever to go aloft in one craft. With a total load of fifty-two tons, the ship rose from the surface of the lake within fifty seconds, wh : "h is fester than on any previous attempt. It flew for almost an hour with its 150 passengers and nineteen members ofc.fhe crew. Tlie DOX actually carried 170 persons, officials of the company revealed, for a 4-year-old boy was aboard neither was officially counted nor weighed in the test records. The previous heavier than air record was sixty persons, carried by a Dornier super-Wal flying boat.
FORTUNES FALL IN WILD STOCK MART
New Volume Mark in Sight Following Frenzied Trading. BY ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Editor NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—Wall Street went through one of its great days today—buying and selling in such great volume that no one could keep an adequate check on the trend of the market. One moment It sagged. Another it shot up. Then again it went down. Tickers were sar behind. Fortunes were swept away in rapid transactions which represented millions of dollars. Board rooms were crowded, but the ticker’s gyrations were useless as a market index. At one time, the tape was 69 minutes late and trading was at .an 8.000,000-share pace, giving indications that all previous records would be broken for volume. Cheers went up when the initial prices were flashed from the Trans Lux boards. These were from fractions to nearly 7 points above the previous close. The advance, however, was due mostly to buying by short sellers of last week to realize profits. \ Asa result, the recovery did not last more than a few minutes. Then selling orders in enormous volume came in. Dealings involving as
The subject of his address was “law enforcement." He objected, particularly, to the immunity granted diplomats here. They should be made to observe the prohibition law, he argued. ‘ The embassies here are one of the reasons for the violations of the liquor laws in Washington. If foreigners can come here and drink, why can't our citizens drink. “Is the foreign representative a greater man than the citizen who pays taxes?” Blease asked. “If I had my way, I would take every drop of liquor from the embassies and pour it into the Potomac river—or give it to the poor to drink and enjoy.”
just above the starving line were j not enough. The worst of these were two young i men named Lawrence Hogan and , Dan Ellis. I hßve met them both; to my simple mind they seem as fine, as magnificent young men as I have ever known. # Lawrence is a huge square-shoul-dered Irishman with a quiet voice and a vast efficiency. Dan is almost too sensationally good-looking. He looks like Henry Ward Beecher with his lion’s mane, and my chief fear is that when the Church of God has time to hear about what is happening to God’s children in Marion, they will get hold*ctf Dan and make him a popular preacher. These lads and a few others, sickened by conditions under which i they live, and having heard vaguely | about a form of salvation known as
MAN IS FOUND HURT GRAVELY; SEEKIIIENTITY Picked Up Unconscious in Auto, Reported Stolen Sunday. Police today sought to identify a young man who was found, injured seriously, at 1:30 a. m. on the Rockville road, in a smashed Auburn sedan, reported stolen Sunday night. All identification marks had been removed from the injured man’s clothes and possessions. His condition is considered critical and he has a possible skull fracture, city hospital physicians said. The damaged car and its occupant were found by W. T. Brill of Danville one mile east of Avon. The car was in a ditch, smashed against a telephone pole. Brill took the unidentified man to Dr. A. L. Lawson, Hendricks county coroner, and they rushed him to the city hospital. Mrs. Letta B. Rogers, 970 Middle drive, Woodruff Place, told Sheriff George L. Winkler the car had been used by her son, Lee R. Rogers, 21, Sunday night. Rogers said he stopped at Twenty-eighth and Meridian streets, shortly before midnight and, when he returned from a restaurant, the car had been stolen. When taken to the city hospital by Winkler and a Times reporter, Rogers said he never had seen the man before. An inside pocket mark on the unidentified man’s suit bore the inscription, “Seymour Clothes, New York.”
much as $3,000,000 were executed at a single gesture. A nod from the buyer to the seller on the floor often meant a loss of millions in market value of stocks. FOIL TRAIN ROBBERY Two Men Taken Off by Police on Tip They Intended Holdup. Bui tiited Prcxx LAFAYETTE, Oct. 21.—Two men were being held by police today as result of a tip that a mail car on the Wabash railroad was to be held up and robbed .after the train left Lafayette. Railroad officers were informed that men riding on the train were to stage the robbery, and the train was searched. Harry Mathis,, 36, and Paul Benfield, 25, were taken from the engine tender and held on a charge of train riding. They were unarmed. PURDUE TEAM SECOND Dairy Judging Honor Won at National Exposition. P % U T\ Wy* .v rcjn J LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 21.—Purdue university's dairy products judging team won second honors at the national dairy exposition which was concluded at St. Louis Saturday after running a week. Ohio State was first. Members of the Purdue team are R. C. Young and A. A. Beck, West Lafayette: M. L. Galema, Lafayette, and J. L. Harris, Columbia City. SHUMAKER NO BETTER Relatives of Dry Chief Report Condition Is Unchanged. Relatives of Dr. Edward S. Shumaker. Indiana Anti-Saloon League, today reported no change in Shumaker's condition. Dr. Shumaker has been growing weaker since he became seriously ill at his home, 2232 Broadway, with a malignant tumor. Ex-Bulgarian Premier Dies Bv United Prcxx BERLIN. Oct. 21.—Vasil Radoslavoff. former premier of Bulgaria, died in a hospital here today. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 50 10 a. m 50 7a. m 50 11 a. m 50 Ba. m..... 50 12 (noon).. 51 Ba. m 50 Ip. m..... 51
INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, OCT. 21, 1929
“the Union," in all innocence and , ignorance, asked the State Feder- 1 ation of Labor how to organize. An organizer was sent in and the workers flocked to the union. Committees were elected to interview Mr. Baldwin, manager of the Marion Manufacturing Company. The demands were reduction of hours to ten a day without decrease in wages. Twenty-two of the most active complainers were fired. A strike was declared in both the Marion Manufacturing Company and the Clinchfield Mills, on July 11, 1929. A certain amount of strike relief was provided by money sent down from the north. That “relief” might not seem altogether adequate for people who live soft. In the way of food, and, understand, this was the only food on which the strikers and their families lived during the peri-
SEVEN FOUND GUILTY OF MURDERING CHIEF
Right to Left—Louis McLaughlin, K. Y. Kendricks, L. Clarence Miller, Fred Beal, George Carter, W. M. McGinness and Joseph Harrison. f
WOMAN HOLDS POLICE AT BAY Brazil Insane Victim ?s Captured by Ruse. Bn United Press BRAZIL. Ind., Oct. 21.—A violently insane woman snapped a loaded revolver three times in the face of police officer John Mathews here and each time cartridges failed to explode. Then Mrs. Charles Armstrong, 33, a powerful woman physically, held off a squad of police five hours with a shotgun and two revolvers when they attempted to arrest her. Efforts were made by police to reach the back entrance and set off a tear gas bomb in the house. But Mrs. Armstrong anticipated their move and made such a steady bombardment that the men were forced to abandon the attempt. Gun fire could not be directed into the house because of six small children. Finally Charles Armstrong, the husband, was located. With him as a decoy, police attracted his wife's attention from them for a few minutes, during which the officefs slipped behind and overpowered her after a hard struggle. She was taken to jail. The woman said she was “killing devils.’'
7 KILLED BY GAS Man and Six Motherless Children Die in Apartment. Bv T'wifrrf Prc*B NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—A man and six motherless children, whom he had reared in a three-room apartment, were killed by gas when a pot of water boiled over, extinguishing the flame on the gas stove. Walter Cavanaugh and the children might have been saved had any of them been able to open the door when a neighbor knocked to summon the head of the family to the telephone. There were indications that Ethel, 17, had struggled out of bed and staggered to the door, only to collapse from the fumes before she could put her hand on the knob. CITY MAN IS KILLED Frank Ledro Is Crushed by Traction Car After Auto Wreck. Body of Frank Nedro, 57, of 120 North Senate sivenue, who was killed Sunday night when he was crushed by an interurban near the Marion-Hancock county line, was to be brought to Indianapolis today for burial. He stepped from his auto to see what damage had been done his car, which was sideswiped by another auto, and was struck by the traction car. Bus Rate Raise Asked Greyhound Lines, Inc., have petitioned the public service commission for permission to increase fares on bus lines operating in Indiana between Louisville and Cincinnati.
od of the strike, it consisted of flour, salt pork, coffee, rice and occasional potatoes And this is the menu on which the strikers in the second, the present strike, are living, as you read these articles. But at least a dozen of the strikers have told me that they were well content because, this food is quite as good as what thqy could afford if they were working. The strike committee also was able to provide such old clothes as were given it. As to houses, the mill companies did not eject the strikers from their property. At present most of the situation in Marion depends upon whether Mr. Mabry Hart, president of the Clinchfield Mills, will or will not evict fiftynine families of strikers from his i company houses.
Gastonia Union Organizers Accept Jury Verdict With Calm. Bu United Prrxx CHARLOTTE, N. C„ Oct. 21.—A superior court jury here today found seven union organizers charged with the second-degree murder of Chief of Police Aderholt of Gastonia, in a strike riot, guilty. The jury submitted its verdict to the court through Foreman John L. Todd, found Fred Erwin Beal, George Carter, William McGinnis, Louis McLaughlin, Clarence Miller, K. Y. Hendricks and Joseph Harrison guilty, as charged. When asked their verdicts on the remaining two charges—assault and conspiracy, the jury became ambiguous in its answers, and Judge M. V. Barnhill ordered it back to return a specific verdict on those two counts. After further deliberation, the jury returned a blanket verdict of “guilty as charged in the indictment,” which also included assault and conspiracy. Judge Barnhill, in response to requests of defense attorneys, asked the jury to return a poll of their verdict, each member individually indicating his vote on each count. With little show of emotion, the defendants accepced the verdict which may mean a sentence of thirty years in the penitentiary. Beal was flushed slightly when his name was called; Miller appeared to stifle a sob; Carter rather blankly watched a ticking telegraph instrument. The jury returned while foreman Todd asked for instructions on the assault charge which Judge Barnhill reread from his charge. Fred Erwin Beal, organizer of the National Textile Workers’ Union, and his fellow defendants had beenon trial for three weeks. Bitterly contested evidence marked the proceedings and the verdict climaxed an outstanding chapter in labor's effort to unionize the new industrial south. Chief Aderholt, who led a group of officers to union headquarters at the Loray mills in Gastonia, June 7, was the foremost victim of. the violence that marked strikes in textile mills of the state. ‘PUSSYFOOT’ IS OPPOSED Veteran Dry Thinks Buyer Action Will Hurt Enforcement. Bu Unitrd Prrxx KANSAS CITY, Kan., Oct. 21. William E. (Pussyfoot) Johnson, veteran dry campaigner, believes that if the buyer of liquor were made criminally responsible, .enforcement would suffer and dry agents would be made criminals. “We have enough laws except those necessary’ to consolidate the prohibition activities under a single head as proposed by President Hoover,” Johnson declared here Sunday night. Australian Cabinet Resigns Bu United Prrxt CANBERRA, Australia, Oct. 21.—The government of Premier Stanley M. Bruce, defeated in the general elections a week ago, tendered its formal resignation today and James Henry Scullin, Labor leader, wasagked to form anew cabinet.
Kutered as Second-Class Matter it Postoffice, Indianapolis
I sympathize with him, for his situation is difficult. If he does not evict these malcontents, he will be giving priceless $lO a month cottages to men who are his enemies for a rental of $3.20 a month. But if he does evict them—and Mr. Hart is a charming man—he will have before his eyes iunless lie goes off duck-shooting, as he was doing when I left) the spectacle o. penniless families being moved out on those red clay street—families presumably with their sick and invalid. For Gastonia is in the same state of North Carolina as is Marion, and here is what happened last May, according to a press report, when like evictions were carried out against like striking and otherwise seditious mill-workers in Gastonia: “Striking members of the Nationj al Textile Workers’ union were sac-
RIOTERS SLASH NEGRODEACON Pastor and Two Others May Face Murder Charge. Bv United Press EVANSTON, 111., Oct. 21.—Murder charges probably will be filed against the Rev. G. A. Long, pastor of Mount Zion Negro Baptist church, Evanston, and two of his deacons if Samuel Sanders, another deacon, dies of razor wounds received during a riot Sunday.. When five squads of Evanston police had battered the milling antagonists into submission, Sanders and two other deacons were found lying across the altar, the former with his throat slashed and the others with serious wounds. Nineteen members of the congregation received knife and razor cuts or broken heads when the pews were torn from their fastenings and used as weapons. Trouble started during a meeting called to discuss a church election, ordered by Circuit Judge Philip Sullivan after an Injunction had been sought to restrain Long from holding services. A demand that the minister be dragged from the pulpit touched off the riot and all members of the congregation of 400, regardless of sex, took sides. GETS SOUVENIR STAMPS Indianapolis Postoffice Receives Ohio River Issue. Four hundred thousand Ohio river canalization commemorative 2-cent stamps have been received at the Indianapolis postoffice. The stamps are of regulation size, are printed in red, with an Ohio river lock as the central design, and the dates “1875-1929.”
HOOVER WILL NOMINATE SPARKS APPEALS JUDGE
P’’ Timeß Kvecial WASHINGTON, Oct. 21. -mination of Judge Will M. Sparks of Rushville, Ind., as judge of the Seventh circuit court of appeals at Chicago, will be sent to the senate by President Hoover within a few days, it was said today. Appointment of Sparks, to succeed Judge A. B. Anderson, was recommended to the President Saturday by Attorney-General William Mitchell, after he had considered several men for the post. At the direction of the President, his secretary notified Senators James E. Watson and Arthur R Robinson of the department’s recommendation. The senators said they would be satisfied with Judge Sparks’ appointment. Sparks was the special judge who tried D. C. Stephenson, former Indiana klan leader, at Noblesvi-le. Sparks sentenced Stephenson to life imprisonment at the state prison after a jury found him guilty Nov 14, 1925, of the murder of MiSS Madge Oberholtzer, Indianapolis worn
ing anew and pressing problem tonight as police deputies began carrying out eviction orders, issued today against sixty-two families formerly employed by the MansvilleJenckes Company. “The deputies began their dreary task at 2 o’clock this afternoon. As the chill of'nightfall crept over the town, they had entered thirteen of the mill shacks, dragging the humble furnishings and cherished possessions into the street. “The mill people, although reduced to a condition approaching absolute poverty by the five weeks’ strike, offered no resistance to the officers. In most cases they stood by passively while their homes were emptied. “Some, however, spoke bitter words, while a few of the women wept as they watched their belong(Continued on Page Five.)
CRIME WAVE CLEANUP NETS ARREST OF 14 Two Youthful Gun-Toters Among Prisoners as Police Open Drive. Two youthful gun-toters and twelve other suspicious characters were under arrest today within a few hours after police opened an anti-banditry campaign. Police Chief Claude M. Worley ordered police to work twelve-hour shifts after a wave of crime, which started Friday, continued over the week-end, resulting in many robberies and the murder of a Negro recluse. James Lacey, 18, who gave his address as “city,” and his 15-year-old eampanion were slated on charges of carrying concealed weapons following their arrest at Washington and New Jersey streets today. The younger of the pair was held at the detention home. The other persons were slated on vagrancy charges and will be questioned by police and detectives. Patrolman Charles Hociago said he saw the two boys come from the rear of a Standard Grocery Company store near the corner. Lacy attempted to get away, but the policeman grabbed him. When the younger boy started to run, the officer tripped him and the gun fell from his pocket. Four holdups Sunday night netted gunmen $l6O, according to police records. In Camp Sullivan park on Sunday night a man who posed as a park policeman slugged William Durham 830 South Senate avenue, and robbed him of $35. Joseph Newton, 35, of 3437 West Washington street, was charged with burglary, after police found him in the American Electric Company offices, 338 West Court street, Sunday night. An acquaintance, whom they tried to persuade to join them in holding up a grocery, informed the police, and Eugene Fulk, 19, of 1229 South Sheffield street, and John Silver, 1# of 413 South Harris street, today were under arrest on charges of conspiracy to commit a felony. Police said they admitted the plot. FIRE FIGHTER KILLED Twelve Others Injured in Blast at Warehouse. Bv United Press WORCESTER, Mass., Oct. 21. An explosion which occurred in a $200,000 fire in a warehouse resulted in the death of a fire lieutenant and Injuries to twelve firemen early today. Struck on the head with a brick, Lieutenant Richard Swenson suffered a fractured skull and was killed. Captain Henry Kane also suffered a skull fracture and a broken leg.
It has been said that if Sparks takes the Chicago Judicial post and Stephenson were granted anew trial by the supreme court, Sparks could not try him and no other Judge could be named in Sparks’ place.
12 Years Prisoner for Daughter’s Lie, Belief
SANTA MONICA, Cal., Oct. 21 —Twelve years in San Quentin prison because his own daughter fabricated a story that he had wronged her, may have been the lot of George Allen Heisel, police said today as they investigated a story told by the daughter, now believed to be married. “An ex-soldier threatened to kill father if I told the truth about who was responsible for my condition," the daughter told
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HOOVER GIVEN WARM TRIBUTE BY THOUSANDS Michigan Residents Brave Rain at Detroit to Hear President. ATTENDS LIGHT JUBtLEE Chief Executive, in Short Talk, Voices Gratitude for Reception. By United Press DETROIT, Oct. 21.—Their enthusiasm undimmed by a slight drizzling rain, a million Michigan residents paid tribue to Presidentt Hoover as he rode from Henry Ford’s reconstructed early American village at Dearborn to the city hall here to make a brief address as part of Light’s Golden Jubilee, in honor of Thomas A. Edison. The President's speech of less than a minute in honor of Edison and thanking almost 100,000, who braved the rain to hear him, was followed by a tremendous cheer from the crowd which filled Campus Martius, the city of city hall. All along the route of the trip from Dearborn to city hall citizens stood in the rain to voice their applause for the President. Wait in Rain The crowd waited patiently in the rain until the President and Mrs. Hoover appeared at the improvised stand on the east steps of the city hall shortly before noon. A cheer went up from the sea of umbrella tops as the President appeared hatless and smiling. Governor Fred W. Green officially welcomed the President to Michigan on behalf the citizens of the state. He gave a two-minute address in which he extolled Hoover and Edison. At the conclusion of the short ceremony, the presidential party was hurried back to Dearbon to rejoin the Edison celebration. Wears Slicker The President and his wife rode in a large open touring car. He wore a slicker as protection from the rain and Mrs. Hoover was protected only by a coat. Escorting the President and Mrs, Hoover through the Smith’s Creek station, Edison glowed with pride and enthusiasm as he reviewed the story of his early struggles. The locomotive which hauled the old train to Smith’s Creek was a counterpart of the famous “General,” captured by Confederate troops from the Union forces in the Civil war. It had been renamed the Sam Hill, in honor of a locomotive engineer Ford knew on the Michigan Central line as a boy. HON.OR HEBREW LEADER Alfred M. Cohen Is Awarded Degree of Doctor of Law. By United Press CINCINNATI, Oct. 21.—Alfred M. Cohen of Cincinnati was awarded the honorary degree of doctor of Hebrew law Sunday, coincident with the celebration of his seventieth birthday anniversary. Cohen is international president of B’Nai B’Rith and past national president of the Young Men’s Hebrew Association. SAVES LIFE AND MAIL Pilot Uses Parachute, Bearing Sack, as Plane Falls. By United Press BEAVER FALLS, Pa., Oct. 21. Harry Sievers, air mail pilot on the Pittsburgh-Cleveland route, saved his life and a sack of mall today when he leaped with a parachute after his motor “died” at an altitude of 1,000 feet. His plane plunged to eartH and was destroyed by fire. Sievers was not injured. TURKEY CROP IS GOOD Large Supply for Thanksgiving Is Forecast from Farm. Bv United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—A turkey crop for Thanksgiving, 9 per cent larger than was available a year ago, was predicted by the agriculture department today. Practically all turkey raising states increased production this year. A large supply of the birds will be marketed for Thanksgiving at average prices.
Chief of Police C. E. Webb, he revealed. He quoted her as saying. ,f l was afraid of this man. I didn’t realize they would send my father to prison for so long.’’ Nine times Heisel, sentenced to fifty years, has applied for parole, being denied each time. Authorities are investigating the woman’s story to discover if she is Heisel's daughter and if other statements she made are true.
Outside Merlon County 3 Conte,
