Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 79, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1930 — Page 3
AUG. 11, 1930
REFUGEE FROM FASCIST REGIME DIES NEARGOAL Perishes in Alps When He Draws Near Safety in France. BY HENRY GUMMING lallH Pttn Sta* Correspondent PARIS. Aug. 11—A tragic story was brought from Chambery today about the fate of an Italian refugee, fleeing from the Fascist regime, who perished in the Alps almost within sight of his goal. The refugee was one of the band who are braving the Alpine glaciers and snowswept passes almost daily in an effort to reach France. A large toll of lives is being exacted among the fugitives. Afraid of Capture One of the emigrants arriving at Chambery said he saw a body stretched out in the snow on the Rochemelon glacier. He was afraid to notify Italian authorities for fear hr would be captured. The emigrant accompanied French searchers from Chambery and they discovered the body after a quest of Torty hours. Papers on the body told the story. One tom scrap of paper read: “I went to the Rochemelon shrine to ask the grace of the Madonna. As I was returning I fell among the rocks. I was frightened by the approaching darkness and fogs. In the event no one rescues me. I ask God's pity. If I am found dead. I ask the finders to inform my father that my last thought is for him. Tlie papers revealed the unfortunate man's identity as Charles Fantozzi of Turin. His father was notified immediately. Caravans Arrive Daily The objective of the many fugitives is Chambery in the foothills of the Alps. The caravans arrive almost daily after surmounting the perils of the
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Pickford to Wed Dancer
Bn JUI IE fIK
Mary Mulhern, 22, and brunet, former Ziegfeld Follies dancer, is to become the third bride of Jack Pickford, 33, brother of Mary Picfcford. according to a “notice of intention to wed’’ filed by Pickford at Salinas, Cal. Pickford. who is the former husband of Marilyn Miller and Olive Thomas, said the wedding would take place soon at Pebble Beach on the picturesque Monterey peninsula.
cold and night, frequently leaving numbers of dead en route. The latest caravan contained thirty men, women and children who told of a successful evasion of the vigilance of the frontier guards.
You*re Always Welcome at W.algreen’s
only to be overtaken by night in the freezing valleys, two miles high. All would have died of cold except for a chance meeting with a party of French officers on rcconnaisance who directed them to Char ibery.
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
'BUGS' MORAN IS REPORTED OUT AS GANG CHIEF Capone Henchman ‘Running Things’ on North Side; Zuta Death Blamed. Bv United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 11. —George (Bugs) Moran, who has fought a spectacular battle with “Scarface” A1 Capone for control of Chicago’s liquor traffic, was understood today to have abdicated leadership of his north side gang. —*■ Ted Newberry, dapper young gunman, who quit Moran’s clan for Capone’s shortly before the murder of Alfred J. Lingle, Chicago Tribune reporter, set up headquarters at the Lantern case and announce he was “running things up north now.” Capone thus appeared to have established himself dictator of all Chicago's gangland—a feat no one has been able to do since the days of “Big Jim” Colosimo. Moran held on as a prominent leader, in fact, grew a more powerful one for more than a year and a half after seven of his henchmen were massacred on St. Valentine’s day in 1929. His downfall came as a natural sequence to the death of Jack Zuta, who shared the chieftainship with him and the Aiello brothersWOUNDED BANDIT DIES Two Others in SBOO Stroh Robbery Held Prisoners. Bv United Press STROH, Ind„ Aug. 11—One of three bandits who robbed the State bank of Stroh Saturday died of wounds suffered in the battle with a posse in which he and his companions were captured. Ray Bennett, 20, died in Sacred Heart hospital. Garrett, cf bullet wound. Virgil Meyers, 18, and Alvin Pratt, 21, captured with him in a cornfield, admitted, officers said, that they held up the bank in which SBOO was obtained.
Where Reds Are Active
HOW •y&.LCk/ ' 'fniHSEIH v HONAN £ oKnanchang -'/
This map shows the new trouble zone in China, where Chinese Communist armies are active against loyal Nationalist troops. The territory in the lower left corner is held by them, with the captured city of Changsha as their base. Hankow, Kinkiang and Nanchang are also threatened. The United States gunboat Plos, laden with American refugees, last was reported in the Siang river near Changsha.
APPENDICITIS IS SHOWING GAIN Fad Diets, Excessive Use of Laxatives Blamed. Bv Science Service NEW YORK, Aug. 11.—Fad diets, modern habits of living, self-pre-scription and overuse of laxative medicines and mineral oils and infection, either directly or from foci, are among the possible causes suggested by doctors to explain the sharp rise in the appendicitis mortality rate during the last nineteen years. In 1928, more than 18,000 deaths in the United Sttaes were attributed to this cause alone. Reports issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, based
cjkese diving ballsprove new motor oil will not thin out... ‘ JuST a turn of the hand and you § . M. a ma^e for yourself one of the most I • M interesting experiments ever made 1 m& JBM with motor oil. Ask any Standard fll Mm I OH Service Station attendant to f A ■ show you the "ball and bottle test”* ‘X I C7'7’ HAT HAPPENS in this experifm§ J| \\ / ment is very simple. As you jllF iS v V turn the bottles upside down, JP the little metal balls ‘'dive” through the .Jgm IK I9H oh to the bottom of each bottle. The p s}||p heavier the oil the more slowly the ball HP drops. In oil that is thinned out, the B JIM Watch the bottle containing New IsoAw/lm, BhH Vis that has gone many hundreds of miles in the crankcase. You will see that it acllX'wSr f Itually is as heavy as the fresh oil. New i j■ — isdiconly motor oil tlist will not Thb small carbon deposit of E.jl~ FT / W far less carbon. Actud tests show in - that New Iso-Vis leaves a carbon ■ j 1 :L_ \ m wmm I deposit 50% less than the average ey that New Iso-Vis will bring you. g|| 1• j j yff p deposit of the better grade oils tested. SOME OILS are satisfactory at high |lll|f I ; f, 'mlWfSl ; New IsO-Vis is HOW On Sale at all atures. fa ßu*New ’so’visTub’katcs ■4> ' KB. Standard OU dealers and service stations. correctly over the complete range §|§§| '-4 U I of engine temperatures. ■™" , B ISOVIS 30 fajwut 0/Tlie }/eu> Polartne.inhpr.- ~ w eS duced by our new refining proc - _ g M Jm f M M # esses —giving it a degree of lubri- A# / Mfk ] MM*l M I J eating efficiency which we believe /fff#My f# / \JMj M > is exceeded only by the Sew Iso- y ----- Vis. The price is 25c a quart.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Indiana) , W. Maple Road and N. Illinois St., E. 10th and Rural For Comvlete Grcasino Service Drive to Standard Oil Greasing Stations at:l Sts., Capitol and North St, Fairfield and Coiieve Atb^ ( N Delaware- and Pratt Sts. ** TANARUS"
on records of policyholders, show an increase of 20 per cent in the death rate for white males and a 14 per cent increase for white females during the last five years of this nine-teen-year period as compared with the first five years. More men died from appendicitis during the entire period than did women and apparently they are becoming increasingly susceptible to the disease. Among adults of both sexes, older persons are being worse hit as the years go by, though even children under 5 have not been spared in the advance of appendicitis fatalities. Only the ages from 10 to 19 years have proved an exception to the general rule that appendicitis deaths are increasing in the face of modern science. Fan Injured by Foul Ball A foul ball at Washington park from the bat of George Kelly, Minneapolis first baseman, resulted in an injured eye Sunday for Guy Berry, 233 Parkview avenue.
RULING SOUGHT ON CITIZENSHIP ARMS_PROMISE U. S. to Appeal Decision in Favor of Two Aliens Opposed to War. Bv Srripps-ffotcard Sctcspnpcr Alliance WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—The right of an alien to become an American citizen even though he refuses to bear arms in what he regards as an “unjustifiable” war will be settled by the United States supreme court as a result of the decision of Solicitor-General Thatcher to appeal from lower court’s rulings in favor of the Rev. Douglas Clyde Macintosh, Yale divinity school professor, and Miss Marie Averil Bland, a Canadian World war nurse living in New York. Solicitor-General Thatcher’s announcement caused general surprise, as it had been expected the government would rest on the decision of the United States circuit court of appeals of the New York district. Upsetting district court’s opinions holding the two pacifists ineligible for citizenship, Circuit Judge Manton had pointed out that even the Kellogg pact sponsored by this government recognized that there were justifiable and unjustifiable wars. Dr. Macintosh first was barred from citizenship by a naturalization examiner of the department of labor, and the ruling was upheld by Federal Judge Burrows of New Haven. Miss Bland was held ineligible by Federal Judge Bontiy of New York. But the circuit court
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reversed both decisions, and it was thought the case had been settled. The government, however, wants the highest tribunal to pass upon the matter. Dr. Macintosh, who was a chaplain with the Canadian army during the World war. said he was not an extreme pacifist and would bear arms if he thought the American cause just. Miss Bland, who nursed American as well as Canadian and British soldiers overseas, said her religious convictions would not permit her to become a combatant, but she expressed willingness to serve on the front lines in the capacity of a nurse as she had In the past. Forty million newspapers are printed in editions of all those published 4n the United States daily. We Wash and Iron Better Than You Can The Best Grand Laundry RI ley 2555 [ detWoTtH \™“ps $/L°° kAt e § A ° aiI * RII> IN u [i Greyhound buses, par* nl Ml I ?,mv ars 0 ‘he highways* care- MM f drivers*' 01 Court rau!s tra ' IV ' and MM* IS SDonsible, service.” re * J •’hilttilelpliW Sl6.no* * ' TRACTION TERMINAL BIS DEPOT Illinois unci Market Sts. rhones, Lincoln 2223 or Riley 4501
