Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 146, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1932 — Page 13
OCT. 28, 1932.
SHERIFF'S WIFE OPENS FIRE AS TRIO FLEE JAIL Evansville Prisoners Escape Amid Volley From Officer's Mate. B<) l nilrrl Prtm PRINCETON. Ind.. Oct. 28.—Amid a volley of shots fired by the sheriff's wife/ three Evansville prisoners escaped from the Gibson county jail here early today. Two of the men, Ernest Olson and John Lively, were serving three-to-tpn-year terms on charges of robbing a Ft, Branch store last week. The third, Herbert Roner, was accused In the same robbery, but entered a plea of not guilty and was awaiting trial. The prisoners rushed past two attendants into the sheriff's living quarters and jumped through a large plate glass window. Mrs. George Hitch, the sheriff's wife, fired five shots from an upstairs window at the fleeting men, but none was believed to have been effective. Roner escaped in his bare feet. Two other prisoners remained in the Jail. Outside accomplices were believed to have aided the escape. IN AGAIN—OUT AGAIN HURLEY VISITS CAPITAL War Secretary Drops Into Washington, Leaves for Campaign Speech. Bit Krrippx-llmi nril S rwspaprr Alliance WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. War Secretary Patrick J. Hurley, flying member of President Herbert Hoover's four campaign cabinet horsemen—Hurley, Hyde, Mills and Wilbur—alightqd in Washington Thursday long enough to sign some mail, express conviction of Hoover’s reelection, and hop off again for Philadelphia to address a meeting of Republican women. Since early summer, Hurley has ■Visited forty-five states. He has covered the country from coast to coast and from New England v to the gulf, making his trips in a chartered plane at his own expense.
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Bishop Defies Ban to Preach
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■ Forcing his way into All Soul’s Protestant Episcopal church in New York M'ith the aid of a locksmith, Bishop William T. Manning conducted the regular Sunday morning service despite threats of the vestry to prosecute him for trespass. The photo shows the bishop, surrounded by scaf-
ROTS, 13, STEAL THIRTEEN GUNS Placed on Probation After Lecture by Judge. Possessing thirteen guns at the age of 13, is precarious business, Byron Russell and Edward Scates,
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folding, preaching his seYmon which strongly upheld the decision of the church’s rector, the Rev. Rollin Dodd, to admit Negroes to the services on an equal basis with white parishioners. Because seven of the eleven vestrymen had broken with the rector, on this queston, he had been relieved of his key and the church closed for repairs.
both 13, decided today in juvenile court. Byron and, Edward and a brother of Byron's, James Russell, 11, of 530 ! South East street, confessed stealing the guns from the shop of Herbert Dauni, 43 Virginia avenue/ All were placed on probation and sent home after a lecture by Russell Newgent, juvenile judge pro tern. Scates lives at 507 South Alabama street. They confessed selling one of the guns for 20 cents.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '.
YARDMASTER FOR 40 YEARS HERE RETIRED James Sweeney, 70, Will Be Honored at Big Four Dinner Monday. James Sweeney, 70, .of 326 East Twenty-second street, who will be retired Monday, after forty years’ service as a yardmaster for the Indianapolis terminal division of the Big Four railroad, will be honor guest at a dinner to be given at the Willow Brook house in New Bethel. Division officials and employes will attend.
CASTLE'S ‘EASY DEBT' PLEDGE ELATESEUROPE Cleveland Speech Taken to Mean U. S. Will Not Drive Hard Bargain. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—The Cleveland speech of Undersecretary of State William R. (Jlastle promising that Uncle Sam will be a "generous creditor*’ when the war debts bob up again, promptly were cabled abroad by the diplomatic representatives of the interested owners of Europe. They did so, however, not because the state department was enunciating anew war debt policy, but because they were interested to know that, despite being hard pressed for money, the United States does not now intend to drive a hard bargain. Capitol hill sentiment, as ex-
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pressed for publication, is at least 95 per cent against cancellation or even reduction of war debts. that Undersecretary Castle was exceeding his mandate in making such extravagant promises. Asa matter of fact, however, Castle was uttering what would have been p. political bromide were it not that international circles accept it as meaning the Washington government has not changed its mind on this all-important issue. Back in 1927. the then Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon said: "Frankly I know of no fairer formula than that of capacity to pay generously applied. Jo ask a debtor nation to pay substantially less than it is able to without undue burden on its people, is to do an injustice to our own taxpayers. “To ask a foreign debtor to pay more than its capacity, is to be guilty of an act of injustice such as I can assure you can not be charged against us.’’ The statement was made in a letter to Dr. Hibben, president of Princeton who, with more than 100 merribers of his faculty, was urging that the dfbts drastically be scaled down. -A. - - „ New York leads all states in number of patents and designs granted its citizens.
VOTE ‘HOOVER FOR OWN good; FACTORY TOLD ‘Your Future Depends Upon Election Outcome/ Is Warning to Employes. By Scrippt-Hoirard Xeutpaper Alliance COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. 28.—Urging re-election of President Herbert Hoover, J. M. Beatty, president of the Federal Glass Company here, in a letter to employes warned them that "your future and the future of your company depend upon the outcome of this election.” Beatty's letter said that Governor Franklin D. RooSevelt “is more or less of an invalid, despite statements to the contrary’’ and “entirely unfitted” for the presidency. The letter reviews Mr. Hoover’s record and the campaign issues at some length, and citing the possibility that Speaker John N. Garner might become President, asks: ’’Can
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you visualize any more serious menace to the country and every citizen in it than such a catastrophe?” Urges Vote for Hoover “As one of the workers of this company, long ago I realized that each of us is a necessary part of the business, and that what is good for the business is and should be good for each of us. “I am compelled by the possible dangers ahead of us, to advise you, and urge you to vote Tor Mr. Hoover. “This is not or rather should not be a year to vote for a Republican or a Democrat just because you always have done so. Future Depends on Vote • “I want you, each and every one, to give this matter careful and mature consideration and if what I have told you rings true. I want you to vote for Herbert Hoover next month. "I never yet have advocated any action on your part, unless it was for your own good and in making the suggestion above, I am giving you better counsel than I have ever done In the past. "Your future and the futurd of your company depend upon the outcome of this election." The company has one of the largest factories in Columbus.
