Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 53, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1930 — Page 5

Jtrtr n, t 939

REDS WORKING FOR HOOSIERS, MINERS CHARGE Union Workers Stirred by Accusations Hurled by Bicknell Men. Bu United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind . July 11.—An orderly confusion reigned at headquarters of District 11, United Mine Workers of America, today, following charges hurled by miners in the Bicknell regions that Communist w orkers of the Soviet union at Moscow were being sent into the mining districts of the United States to foment strife and rebellion. District officials sat tight and said nothing, and there was a steady hum in the background. Persons acquainted with the mine situation in Indiana considered this the customary lull before a storm. A mass meeting of union miners was scheduled to be held at Sullivan tonight. Present conditions in the Indiana mining district developed early this week when District 11 officials issued a statement charging the “reorganized" United Mine Workers of America, formed in Illinois recently, with invading Indiana in. an attempt to negotiate contracts to work for wages lower than the prevailing union scale. Following the statement of the district officials a meeting of 400 men, employed by the Knox Consolidated Coal Company, Bicknell, adopted a resolution confirming charges made by William L. Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, that Knox company officials had hired Communist workers in their mines. PROBATE RACER’S WILL Alonzo McDonald's $75,000 Estate Is Requested to Family. The $75,000 estate left by Alonzo McDonald, Indianapolis reinsman who died in Toledo. 0., June 26. was left to the widow, Mrs. Mary McDonald; a son. George O. McDonald, and a daughter. Miss Sarah E. McDonald, according to terms of the will filed for probate today. The survivors will receive personal property and the major por-

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BELIEVE IT OR NOT

v hh t—■>! M B& * m mm MB i WROTE A POEM OF tQO.OOO STANZAS wqm the handball champ'ONShipqt Coney Isia^ $ 1930. King Features Syndicate. Inc. r.rtct Britain rights reserved.

tion of the estate, while employes and distant relatives were given small bequests.

On request, sent with stamped addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.

OBSERVE DATE OF MASSACRE Bloodiest Indian Raid Took Place 152 Years Ago. Bu United Press COBLESKILL, N. Y., July 11.— One hundred and fifty-second anniversary of the Cherry Valley massacre, bloddiest Indian outbreak in the annals of North America, will be observed in this locality this year. Twenty-five miles northwest of Howe Caverns near Cobleskill lies the town of Cherry Valley, scene of this slaughter. Today the town is a somnolent rural community, with several thousand inhabitants, in the heart of a thrifty dairying center. But its memory of Revolutionary war days fill romantic pages of history. Into Cherry Valley, on Nov. 11, 1778, swooped 800 Indians like wolves on a fold, led by Joseph Brant, the Mohawk Scourge. The

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l“wX7 Registered O. S. Lly Patent Office. RIPLEY

savages killed fifty defenseless men, women and children, sacked the town, burned its houses and carried off seventy prisoners, many of whom were scalped and tomahawked before they reached their Canadian captivity. The aboriginal cruelty of this massacre stunned the American colonists, but it roused the soldiers of George Washington to greater fury against the redcoats and their Indian allies. Trustee Is Reappointed President John T. Boyd (Rep.), Vincennes, of the board of trustees of the Indiana state farm, Putnamville, has been reappointed trustee by Governor Harry G. Leslie for a four-year term commencing July 2. He has served twelve years.

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P.O. CLERKS IN STATE SESSION Gather in City for 13th Annual Meeting. Postoffice clerks of the state gathered here today for their thirteenth annual convention. An interesting program of speaking and entertainment has been arranged for the visitors. They were to be welcomed by Mayor Reginald Sullivan at the opening of the business session this afternoon at the Spink-Arms. Harry Priest, president of the Indiana federation, was to respond. Speakers were to include Robert H. Bryson, Indianapolis postmaster; John Stettler, National Association of Letter Carriers; L. H. Reynolds, Joint Association Postal Employes; O. Allen, Illinois Federation of Postoffice Clerks, and Karl Stimpson, fourth vice-president; Thomas F. Flaherty, secretary-treasurer of the National Federation of Postoffice Clerks, and by J. L. Taylor, state president. The clerks and their families were to attend the night baseball game between Indianapolis and Toledo tonight, when the Indianapolis postoffice band is to play. Business sessions will be held Saturday and the annual banquet Saturday night, when Louis Ludlow, Seventh district congressman; Harry Rowbottom, First district congressman, and David Hogg, Twelfth district congressman and member of the postoffice committee of the house, and prominent postoffice men are scheduled to speak. A dance will follow the banquet. CURTISS RESTS WELL Airplane Builder Goes Under Knife for Appendicitis, Bu United Press BUFFALO, N. Y„ July 11.—An operation for appendicitis performed here today on Glenn H. Curtiss, airplane manufacturer, was reported successful by Dr. Thew Wright, his physician. Curtiss was in the operating room one hour and thirty minutes. “He came through it in excellent shape," said Wright. “I can’t tell rs yet exactly how long he will be confined to the hospital."

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! CONVENTION FIGHT IS LED BY STOKES William Stokes, chief of the Indiana utilities publicity bureau, with offices at 1548 Consolidated building, has started to organize a “Business Men's League of Indiana” to fight a constitutional convention. Meetings will be held to counteract those arranged by the league advocating the convention, which has headquarters in the Lemcke building. People have been urged to support the constitutional convention by voting for it this fall. The Indiana League of Women Voters, farm and labor leaders are among the ardent advocates for anew Constitution in Indiana. Opposition headquarters will be in Stokes’ office.

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PARK MUSIC FAILING Popularity of Radio Blamed by City Board. There’ll be no music in the parks next year if funds are required from j the park board appropriation. Appropriation of funds for band

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concert* in public parks is not warranted by public demand because of the increased popularity of radio, city officials declare. “With radios in every block the public does not patronise the concerts as in former years.” commented Logan C. Scholl, board member. Expenditure of SIOO for music in Douglas park was authorized from the Christmas carolling fund.