Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1932 — Page 18
PAGE 18
HUNT PRESSED FOR ASSAILANT OF CONSTADLE Officer, Wounded by Negro in Eviction, Expected to Recover. Recovery of O. P. Bebinger, 67, constable, who was .shot and wounded seriously by a Negro tenant, whom he attempted to evict from a dwelling at 957 North Tremont street, was expected today by city hospital physicians. Meanwhile, search w-as pressed by police for William Dixon, occupant of the house, who fired a shotgun slug into Bebinger's body, and fled. X-ray photographs revealed that two slugs from the shotgun cartridge entered Bebinger's iungs and several slugs were buried in his right arm and side. The shooting occurred as Bebinger, constable in the court of Justice of the Peace Carl King, Washington township, went to the Dixon home with Aly Johnson and James Clark, deputies, to serve the eviction warrant.. Bebinger told police that he knocked several times at the door, and, getting no response, entered the home through a window. Johnson and Clark remained outside. As Bebinger climbed through the window, he told police. Dixon rose from a bed and grabbed a shotgun. Bebinger said he warned Dixon to drop the weapon and permit serving of the eviction paper. Dixon retreated through the house to the rear yard with Bebinger following, police were told. There, Bebinger said, he fired one shot into the ground, after Dixon disregarded repeated warnings. Dixon answered by firing the shotgun at Bebinger’s body. As the shooting occurred in the rear yard, Johnson and Clark were said to have been attacked by Cleveland Boykin, Negro, a neighbor. Dixon fled after the shooting and police were summoned by Clark, who broke away in the struggle with Boykin, who later was arrested on a vagrancy count, and is held in dcfualt of high bond. Police squdds combed the vicinity for hours after the shooting, but failed to find Dixon Bebinger, formerly justice of the peace of Washington township, lives at 6055 College avenue.
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CHILDREN HURT AT PLAY One Cut on Face, Another Sustains Severed Foot Artery. Two children were injured Thursday while at, play. Cut on the face was incurred by Velvin Peak, 4, of 839 East Maryland street, when he fell against the edge of a tub. Artery in the left foot of Marie Reynolds. 9. of 3150 Ringgold street, was severed when she stepped on an edged object. Woman Is Hurt in Fall Falling from a chair while attempting to hang a picture, Mrs. Barbara E. Hillman, 68, suffered a fracture of the right arm Thursday at her home, 1812 South Pershing avenue.
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ORANGE FOILS ROAD HOLDUP % Man Hurls It in Bandit’s Eye, Then Flees. Orange ade or orange aid—take your pick—was a big help Thursday afternoon to William W. Scott, traveling representative of a magazine published in Washington, D. C. Scott told police that he parked his automobile at the side of the National road five miles east of Greenfield and was eating an orange
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
when a man who alighted from another car, pointed a revolver at him and said: “Gimme what you got in your hip pocket or m kill you.” From a distance of about five feet. Scott hurled the orange. It struck the bandit in an eye. Scott ran. One shot which went wild was fired m his direction. Then the bandit climbed into the car in which a companion waited and disappeared. In parts of Victoria, Australia, mice have become such a pest that they run over the beds of sleeping people and even attack cats.
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JULY 1, 1932
