Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1931 — Page 2
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TOT, MAN DIE OF INJURIES IN CAR ACCIDENTS 5-Year-Old Girl Is Hurt Fatally When Hit by Auto in Front of Home. Thf year's traffic fatality toll in Marion county mounted to sixtyreven today, as names of two vict ms of crashes Wednesday were added. Rosalie Rackcmann, 5, of 114' * South Noble street, was injured fatally when struck by an automobile -- in front of her home. Thomas Pumphrey, S’*"} 40. of 4181 Shelby street . J was injured fatilly g when his car was struck by a passenger train at Shelby street and the Pennsylvania railroad. The little girl was playing with her two sisters, Joana 7, and Juliet 2, on the sidewalk near their home, when suddenly she darted into the street into the path of an automobile driven by Rex Wilson, 30, of 149 Kansas street. A fender knocked her down, and she rolled under the car, the wheels of which passed over her body. She died in an ambulance en route to city hospital. Witnesses said Wilson was not to blame. Pumphrey was driving south on Shelby street to his home, when the locomotive of the inbound train struck his car and hurled it against a signal light standard and utilities pole. He died three hours later in city hospital. Witnesses disagreed as to whether warning flasher lights and a bell w’ere operating. Miss Ruby Johnson, 32. and Miss Orpha Wood, 23, of 1042'., Virginia avenue, were injured when struck by an auto at Capitol avenue and Washington street, Wednesday. Mrs. Lena Beyers, 44, of 1540 South Randolph street, driver of the car,
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I Norma Splits With Boss and Hunts New Job
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Norma Talmadge
Screen Star Freed Because She Wished to Choose Own Stories. By I mlrd Pin u* HOLLYWOOD. May 14.—Because Norma Talmadge wished to choose her own film stories against the protest of Samuel Goldwyn, the screen star was free today at her own request from her contract wuth United Artists. Miss Talmadge, wife of Joseph Schcnck, head of United Artists, had two more pictures to make under the contract. t The actress said she had several offers .from other film companies, and would accept one.
was arrested on reckless driving and assault and battery charges. Only two of eleven persons in two automobiles were injured when the cars crashed on National road west of the city Wednesday night. Charles Miller. 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theron Miller, 2415 Massachusetts avenue, was cut on the head, and Mrs. Florence Brooks. 45, of 110 South Elder street, was cut badly.
WORLD AMAZES MAN FREE AFTER 34-YEAR TERM Spanish-American War Had Not Been Fought When He Went to Cell. By United Pres* BOSTON, May 14.—Henry Stewart, 66, today was enjoying his first day of freedom in thirty-four years. William McKinley w-as President, Roger Wolcott was Governor of Massachusetts, and the SpanishAmerican war had not yet been fought when this man, now thin and gray, entered state prison to serve a life sentence for killing a fellow worker. Boston's crooked streets were filled with horse-drawm traffic at the time. He was astonished at the changes that had taken place—at the number of motor vehicles, at the Boston elevated railway and subw T ay system, at airplanes w hich soared over the city, at new buildings which had sprung up. “It's a different world than I thought it would be, - ’ he said. “Forty years ago I believed it would be 200 years before we would have airplanes." At the statehouse. where he called to thank Governor Joseph B. Ely in connection with his release, Stewart exclaimed: “This is the first time I have been here. What a magnificent buildings” Stewart will spend the next month under the care of the Salvation Army, then plans to go to work. Asked if he intended to get married. he replied: “Not on your life! I'll have enough trouble looking after myself.” Two Held to Grand Jury Alleged to have broken into eight schoolhouses, Ed Tuttle, 18. of Toledo, and a 16-year-old boy were bound over to the county grand jury today on burglary and petit larceny charges.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Marries Soon
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Sylvia Breamer. above, retired motion picture actress, wiH marry Douglas Wood, stage actor, Hollywood has just learned. They met while appearing together in a play in Greenwich, Conn. The romance bloomed anew when he went to the coast to appear in the movies. They'll marry before she goes to Australia to settle her father's estate. MRS. MARY KEACH DIES Resident of City for More Than Half Century Succumbs. Funeral services wiil be held at 8 Saturday morning for Mrs. Mary Keach, 94. a native of Ireland and resident of Indianapolis more than half a century. Services will be at the home of Leroy J. Keach, her grandson, at 4311 Broadway, and at 9 another service will be held in St. Patrick’s church. ' Mrs. Keach died Wednesday in St. Francis hospital. Beech Grove. She w'as the mother of James L. Keach. a commission merchant, who died twelve years ago. The grandson is the only survivor.
FATHER OF 18 TO DEBATE BIRTH CONTROL ISSUEj Margaret Sanger to Face Formidable Foe in Chief Justice of Georgia. By United Press ATLANTA. Ga . May 14.—Chief Justice Richard B. Russell of the Georgia supreme court, father of eighteen children, including a son who will become Governor next month, was ready today with at least eighteen reasons why he is against birth control. He will debate the subject tonight, with Margaret Sanger, leading advocate of birth control, as his opponent. Miss Sanger, who in real life is Mrs. J. Noah Slee, mother of two • sons and a daughter, and for many ve/irs has led the fight to legalize dissemination’of contraceptive information. faces a picturesque figure in Judg-. Russell. He is a Georgia planter of the old type, with a drooling mustache. His tall spare figure is accentuated by the black frocktail coat he usually wears. ) A newspaper editor before becoming a judge, holder of several hon- ] orary college degrees, interested in many social organizations, he epi- I tomizes the true southern gentle- . i man of the old school. He *is certain to extol the senti- : mental values of a large and happy t home and offer his own family as an example. The sociological side of the question he will also touch upon, he said. Altogether*, he will advance eighteen arguments against birth control. Cut in Low Pay Proposed CARMEL, Ind., May 14.—A citizens’ ticket composed of candidates for four trusteeships, clerk and treasurer of Carmel, is pledged above all else to reduce salaries of those posts from S6O to sl2 per annum. Election of the ticket would reduce : office expenditures for this town of 1,500 by S2BB a year.
I Last Man 9
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Lone survivor of the famous Last Man's Club of Minnesota, Captain Charles M. Lockwood, is shown above as he arrived in Washington during a pilgrimage to the battle fields where* he fought seventy years ago. The 88-yeas-old veteran brought with him a small bottle of the wine which, last July, he drank as a toast to his departed mates of Company B. First Minnesota, a Civil war regiment.
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'‘MACHINE GUN' O'HARE AWAITS U.S. TRIAL HERE Gangster Faces Charge of Conspiracy in Liquor Ring in State. Silent until he can consult an attorney, Edward (Machine Gun) O'Hare, long connected with middle western bands of hoodlums, was held in county jail here today. He is awaiting arraignment on a federal court indictment more than i a year old. The indictment charges O Hare w ith three liquor conspiracies. He was named by a federal grand jury in the . Joe Traum liquor ring operating out of Terre Haute. O'Hare was captured with a gang of other hoodlums in their hangout in East St. Louis, 111., last week, | and was taken to Chicago as a suspected member of the mob led by Ed iKiller) Burke, recently caught in Missouri. i O'Hare first was wanted at Terre Haute in 1929. where a period of gang warfare ended in the tlaying ! of Jackie Morrison and George Ad-
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