Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1930 — Page 24

PAGE 24

QUIZ GANGSTER ABOUT ATTEMPT TO SLAY COP Assassins Shoot at Officer Riding on Street Car in Chicago. Pi/ United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 31.—James <Fur) Bammons, one of Chicago's “public enemies,” was question by police today in connection with the serious wounding by gangsters of an officer who was scheduled to testify for the state in the murder trial of William (Three-Fingered) Jack White, another "enemy.” Sammons, one of the most notorious of the Chicago gang leaders, was arrested in White’s home a few hours after he had appeared in court to plead against forfeiture of a $26,000 bond for appearance on a fugitive warrant from Baltimore, Md. Officers felt certain he knew something about the attempt Wednesday morning to assassinate James Mcßride, police sergeant, who will be the principal state witness at the scheduled trial of White, charged with killing another officer. Mcßride, riding in a suburban Street car, was shot in the shoulder and face about twenty minutes after Sammons left Judge Edgar A. Jonas’ court. Police said he could easily have gone the distance between the court and the scene of the shooting in that length of time. Sammons forfeited the $25,000 bond Wednesday when he failed to appear on a fugitive warrant charging him with a Baltimore bank robbery for which Willie Niemoth was convicted. > Lifelong Resident Dies £u Times Special MIDDLEBORO, Ind., Oct. 31. Alistus J. Little, 67, for forty years proprietor of the local water power flour mill, is dead following a brief illness. He was a lifelong resident of Middleboro. He leaves his widow, a son and a daughter.

J v.v.v.v.v.\v!v.vr.v.v \ \ \ v J \ \ \ s I v////Xv!%vXv/X\va \ / x/**' \ \ \ " ' \ >. w \ \ \ \ * 1 •::•:! v "■ *-i \ __ \ *: ; -v> *• * mu g i \ Ii V%* , ***iV**i****/VV*.VV'. i f I \ ' i •*o°o*e*^v > ••••••• , #*#***s2*2 # *** \ \ \ " *•*•%*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•*•* THE BIG DRIVE IS OFsl We're Out to Break All Previous Records (or Value-Giving |Fj|yrr T flil Hull Giving High Prices '\\w\ jjpß THE FINAL WALLOP! FINE FOOTWEAR FOR MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN KIP QQc $| 99 9099 *rfe= JjKjs^\ v %J%J I and Jm IKIIL SEASON’S SMARTEST PATTERNS T Profits are cut to the core. . . . We’re out to get the shoe business of s “22^'^. f this town by outselling and underselling the other fellow. Your SV , v .-v^ money cheerfully REFUNDED if, during this BIG DRIVE, you find vvffpfc) r/nyf tot* Ht I i^\A-v_v\ WnM FIP<I Wt —Oil-treated uppers—soft and \ Jp 1 J \U AU CII^Q TV U men O pfevjj|rjj pliable. Extra heavy water- \ VjU I liUItIEII U A DOU JPngftm /$ r e sis t in ? soles. Rugged shoes \ fcj f First Quality AKUiI Xlufi *3 f° r rough weather. \ A* J Fine Cloth SUPPORTS \£® / BOYS ’ men's \W [ GALOSHES WjSjL/ SIZES with Full 16-Inch % C V Q* 1 & $d .99 | fji7 KNIFE BOOT \% fx * I " JLJ$&k 1 4KHm *mK? jr Protect your health this winGive relief for many type* ofter by keeping your feet warm foot trouble. Many attractive Get your Hl-Tops be- [ X high grade galoshes. Buy now stjlM to choose from. J f(, re snow (ties. at a bargain price.

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THE IMWANAPOUS TIMES

RUSSIANS ANF CHINESE AGAIN NEARJONFLICT Troops Are Massed Along Border; Peace Parley Is Futile. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS SeriDDs-Howard Forelro Editor WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Chinese and Russians once again are reported massing troops along the Manchu-Siberian frontier, and a repetition of last fall’s bloodshed in that region is feared. The cause remains fundamentally the same, namely the dispute over the Chinese Eastern railway, across northern Manchuria, which the two governments own and operate in common. Negotiations between Moscow and Nanking have broken down and dispatches from Moscow indicate that the Chinese delegation is preparing to leave. Last year the Chinese arrested all the higher Russian officials in charge of the railway, deported some and put the rest in prison. The

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Russians were accused of plotting tne overthrow of the Chinese republic, with a view to setting up a Soviet regime. Immediately Russia sent an ultimatum to Chir.a and mobilized for war. China rejected the ultimatum and dug in along the Siberian border. A state of war resulted, cavalry, infantry, and air raids being of almost daily occurrence. Both sides alleged massacres. Secretary of State Stimson saw fit to warn both of their pledges under the Kellogg pact outlawing war, so grave did the situation become. A truce ' was patched up at the border town of Khabarovsk, however, following the Russian invasion of Manchuria as far as Hailar, some 200 miles inside the border, and plans were made for a formal conference. It is this conference, held at Moscow, that now has entered an impasse. The Chinese claim the Soviet demands have been impossible from the beginning. The Soviet government has insisted that not only should the conference fix the status of the railroads, but settle future relations between the two countries as well. —Moscow, it appears, may be playing for time, in the hope that events may strengthen her hand. Breaking off of relations with Nanking, therefore, would not be displeasing.

PREVENT SPLIT OVERBALDWIN British Party Is United to Fight MacDonald. Bu United Press LONDON, Oct. 31.—Forces of the conservative party were united today for an attack on the labor government of Premier Ramsay MacDonald. Stanley Baldwin, former conservative premier, received a unanimous vote of confidence from his party Thursday which ended rumors of a possible split in the conservative ranks. Approval of Baldwin’s leadership was believed to have closed a difficult period in the party’s existence, and to have settled the question of conservative policies in the next general election. An alleged "ultimatum” to Baldwin. demanding his resignation as party leader, remained one of the

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.OCT. SI, IWI

signed the manifesto renounced any knowledge of it and pledged their l unqualified support to Baldwin.