Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1931 — Page 10
PAGE 10
CLEW TO CHILD KILLING GIVEN BY GANGSTER Thug Tells of Attack and How He Saved Life of Little Boy. By United Pres* NEW YORK. Aug. 7.—Police today believed they had obtained important clews to the solution of the "child massacre” in Harlem’s Little Italy from a swarthy young gangster, believed the intended target of gunmen who killed one child and wounded four of his playmates. The man, Anthony Trobino, 21, was arrested Wednesday and charged with robbing Samuel Orshan, manager of a shoe store. Police Commissioner Edward P. Mulrooney, however, revealed he would be held as a material witness to the shooting outside the Helmar Social Club. According to a confession, police say Torbino made, the young man was in a car in front of the Helmar Social Club when a car loaded with gunmen drove up and its occupants began firing. "I dropped to the floor of the car and began to crawl out the door to the sidewalk,” police quoted Torbino as saying. "All this time the shots continued. I heard the children screaming and saw the people running. "As I crawled along the sidewalk, I found a little boy. I picked him up a.*d carried him into a doorway for shelter.” First reports of the “confession” Indicated Torbina had used the child as a shield, exposing him to gangster bullets, but the young man denied this and detectives, after checking up his statements in
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Miss Edna Conduitt, 21 West Twenty-eighth street, secretary in the office of the state securities commissioner, started w f hat threatens to be an epidemic of the new style Empress Eugenie hats at the statehouse. This pioneer bonnet is brown with a slick little feather on one side.
the neighborhood, said it was not true.
“Give the devil his due,” one police official said. “What actually happened was that Torbino picked up the kid and dragged it into the vestibule to get it out of the line of fire.”
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GOV. MURRAY TO BE DEMOCRATIC STORM [CENTER Oklahoma’s ‘Alfalfa Bill’ May Be Convention Champion. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.—Much of the commotion at the next Democratic national convention Is expected to come from William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray, lank, walrusmoustached survivor of the ripsnorting pioneer days of Oklahoma and now its cain-raising Governor. His latest exploit has been to station 200 national guardsmen in Oklahoma oil fields to keep every flush well closed until 50-cent oil goe* to sl. The 101 Ranch show ran out of funds here this week and the circus hands and cowboys are trying to get their pay. “If Alfalfa Bill knew about this he might help us,” one Oklahoma cowboy performer said. You can’t keep a man like that down in times like these and all the pleas for a harmony convention when the Democrats meet next year wouldn’t have much effect if Governor Murray had anything on his chest—which, according to advices from Oklahoma, he has. “I hope to be on the national platform committee and if no one else will bring forth a good fundamental platform, I will write one myself,” Murray said recently. One of his friends here today said the
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Last Straw By Unit and Press ST. LOUIS, Aug. 7.—An unidentified man stood on the Mississippi river free bridge, carefully pulled his straw hat down tightly over his head so it wouldn’t blow off, and leaped over the railing into the river. The hat still was wedged tightly on his head when his body was recovered.
Governor is ready to go to the Democratic convention “and make fifteen speeches if necessary.” He said there was no doubt but that Murray would have complete control of the Oklahoma Democratic delegation, and would be the state’s member of the convention platform committee if he desired. From Oklahoma comes talk that Murray also will be the favorite son candidate for the presidential nomination and that he will be in the running for the vice-presidential nomination too. Every depression brings on the national stage men of the people, Jacksonian figures, usually rough and salty.
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Ibruening cheerful German Chancellor Reports Harmony With Duce. By United Press ROME, Aug. 7.—After an initial conference today with Premier Benito Mussolini, Chancellor Heinrich Bruening of Germany an- ! nounced they had found themselves in complete agreement on the idea j that “Europe needs the establishment of confidence.”
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’AUG. 7, 1931
