Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 94, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1933 — Page 3

AUG. 29, 1983

DEATH CLAIMS PETER J, TEAL, 35-YEAR SQUIRE Pioneer Oaklandon Resident Entered Politics at 18: Rites Today. Last rites for Peter J. Teal, pioneer resident of Lawrence township. were to be held at 2 today at his home In Oaklandon. Burial was to be In Mock cemetery. Mr. Teal, who had been a justice of the peace thirty-five years, died Sunday at his home. He was a popular marrying squire, and it has been estimated that he has married more than 1.000 couples. He was educated in LawTence township public schools, and attended a Universalist college at Logansport. He entered politics when he was 18, serving as a township road supervisor. Surviving him are a son, Earl Teal, Fortville; two daughters, Mrs. Orda Mollenkopl, Oaklandon, and Mrs. Guy Peters, Lawrence; four grandchildren and three great grandchildren. His wife, Mrs. Levina Todd Teal, to whom he was married in 1876, died several years ago. * Decorator Is Dead Edwin L. Williams, 75, a painter and decorator many years, died Monday at his home, 526 North Lynn street. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Emma W. Williams; three sons, Carl and Roy Williams, Indianapolis, and Frank Williams, St. Louis Park, Minn.; two daughters, Mrs. Ruth L. Bailey, Evansville, and Mrs. Mary E. Archer, Indianapolis, and a brother, Newton Williams, Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held at 2 Wednesday in the Shirley Brothers west side chapel. 2002 West Michigan street. Burial will be in Floral Park cemetery. Dies of Heart Attack Death, attributed to heart disease, came to John Henry Martin, 48, of 213 Blake street. Monday afternoon while he was walking through a vacant lot’ in the 200 block Blake street. Dr. E R. Wilson, deputy corner, investigated. Mrs. Swafford Dies Mrs. Eve Swafford. 76, died Monday while sitting in a chair at 228 North New Jersey street, where she roomed. Dr. John E. Wyttenbach, deputy coroner, who investigated, sent the body to the city morgue. Onlysurvivor is a son, F. E. Trowbridge, 1513 Deloss street. BOAT OWNERS CLEAR IN WORLD FAIR CRASH Killing of Three Found Accidental by Coroner's Jury. By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 29.—After listening to three and a half hours of conflicting testimony, a coroner’s jury Monday decided that the boat crash in which John H. Schultz, Cleveland attorney, his wife, and 7-year-old son were killed, was accidental. The three were visting A Century of Progress and had taken a ride last Friday night in a speedboat piloted by Walter Pomper. When the speedboat collided with a private yacht, owned and piloted by Anthony O’Malley, all three members of the family were thrown into the water and drowned. Fourteen witnesses to the crash testified at the inquest. Both Pomper and O'Malley were absolved of blame. PRISON ATTACHE NAMED Valparaiso Man Becomes Head of Michigan City Farm. By r nit' il Press MICHIGAN CITY. Aug. 29.—Ellis C. Pullins. Valparaiso farmer, will become superintendent of the Benton farm of the Indiana state prison. Sept. 1. He will succeed Earl Townsend, dismissed by Warden Louis E. Kunkel. Pruning of prison expenses is continuing with dismissal of more prison guards. Kunkel said today. Hitchhiker Finds Mother Bp United PrmM WICHITA. Kan., Aug. 29.—Miss Elno Hobson. 18. Colorado hitchhiker. discovered her mother here after more than seventeen years of i separation. A story- in the Wichita 1 Lagle brought the two together \ when the girl arrived. She did not know her mother's full name.

CORRECTION

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COUNTY COUNCIL TALKS TAX RATE 55-Cent Figure Is Reported Likely When Action Is Taken Tuesday. County council members are in informal session today for tax rate and budget discussion as a step toward final figures to be decided at their regular fall meeting to open Tuesday. e As it now stands, the budget calls for a 76-cent tax rate. The rate last year was 41 cents. It is behevpd that after all budget paring has been completed, a rate of not less than 55 cents will be required. Funds required for payment of old age pensions and expenses of voter registration and an election next year account for most of the tax rate increase. Delinquency and lowered property values are other factors. Gustave Schwab, 2601 Kessler boulevard, a truck gardener, was elected a member of the council today, succeeding Walter C. Boetcher, who resigned as council president to head the city works board. There are now three truck gardeners in the council membership of seven. Besides Schwab, the gardeners are Harry Holilt and Charles Hafer. S2OO LOOT IS TAKEN FROM PARKED CARS A. C. Byerly Loses 5142.50 In Clothing; Sheet Music Stolen. Clothing, sheet music and a revolver with a total value of more than S2OO comprised loot taken from three parked automobiles Monday. Heaviest loser was A. C. Byerly, 301 Majestic building, who reported to police that clothing worth $142.50 was stolen from his car at Pennsylvania and Maryland streets. Sheet music valued at $75 was taken from the automobile of William Steinhauer, 41 South Rural street, director of the Indiana Night Hawks band, while the car was at a dance pavilion at Seventy-eighth street and the Allisonville road. A revolver and raincoat were taken from the automobile of George Wilson, 346 Harlan street, a merchant policeman, at La Salle and Tenth streets. TEACHERS FIGHT BOARD Two Fired at Anderson to Take Ouster to Court. By United Press ANDERSON. Ind., Aug. 29 —H. P. Cook, dismissed from the Anderson high school teaching staff for alleged mishandling of athletic funds, and Roscoe E. Thomas, dismissed for alleged incompetence, said today they have engaged a lawyer to defend them n their controversy with the Anderson board of education. They will invoke the teacher tenure law. Cook has made up the shortages found in the athletic funds following suspension of Anderson from the I. H. S. A. A. last spring. He has been a teacher here more than twenty years. PIKE SCHOOLS TO OPEN Sept. 5 Set for Organization of Township Classes. Pike township schools will open for organization of classes at 8 a. m. Sept. 5. Attendance Is urged due to the new state law making average daily attendance a basis of tax collections. Teachers of the township will meet at 10:30 a. m. E. C. Bratt. New Augusta public school principal, urged pupils, expecting to enter the tiigh school by transfer, to be present on the opening day.

RISING MIDWAY HETALDS STATE FAIR

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Upper—Erection of concession stands for the Indiana state fair, . Sept. 2 to 8, has started. The photo shows the first stand going up on ’ the midway, with others soon to follow for the great Hoosier show. Lower—E. J. Barker, fair secretary-treasurer, right, and T. R. Johnston, assistant publicity director, study' a plan view of the fairgrounds on which locations of exhibits, concessions and other features have been spotted.

Sentence for Life Plus 25 Years Is Given Youth By United Press CROWN POINT, Ind., Aug. 29—A sentence of life plus twenty-five years confronted Walter Bopp of Hammond today, following his plea of guilty to shooting a policeman while robbing the Hammond Pure Ice Company.

HEARING IS SET IN FATAL AUTO CRASH Guy J. White Facing Two Charges in Death. Guy J. White, 63, Noblesville, arrested Monday after an automobile crash in which fatal injuries were incurred by Mrs. Elizabeth Sochalski, 65. o< 2540 College avenue, will be given a hearing Friday in municipal court. Charges of failure to stop at a preferential street and failure to display certificate of title to his automobile are faced by White. Dr. W. E. Arbuckle, coroner, said today no decision has been reached as to whether other charges will be filed. Mrs. Sochalski, a mute, was riding in an automobile driven by her son, Cyrus Sochalski, 35, also a mute, which collided at Thirtieth street and Keystone avenue, with the car of White. She died shortly afterward in city hospital. Her death was the eighty-sixth traffic fatality in the county since Jan. 1. PATENT INFRINGEMENT LAID TO CITY BOARD Chicago Firm Asks Injunction in Sewage Disposal Case. The Activated Sludge Company of Chicago today had filed suit in federal court against the city sanitary board charging that the city board has infringed upon patents for purification of sewage held by them. The suit of the Chicago corporation stated that the sanitary commission had been notified it was infringing on the patent and that the city had not heeded their warning The Activated Sludge organization asks for a temporary injunction before the hearing to keep the city from using the equipment under question and for a permanent injunction at the hearing. Members of the sanitary board are Maurice E. Tennant, Otto C. Ross and Alfred H. Moore, city engineer. Fraternity in Receivership By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 29. County Treasurer Joseph B. McDonough was an unofficial, but nevertheless a real, member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity at the University of Chicago today. The chapter house was placed under his receivership for a tax delinquency of $2,661.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Judge William J. Murray of Lake criminal court ordered the youth to state prison for life on charges of shooting an officer and then added twenty-five years for robbery with a gun. Patrolmen Tebodo was shot in the leg. Bopp escaped with sl3l and his father, Harley Bopp, received a suspended sentence of one to ten years on charges of receiving a portion of the loot.

HITLER STARTS NEW DRIVE TO INSUREPOWER Vital Changes in*His Party Structure Expected to Tighten Control. BY FREDERICK OECHSNER United Pres* Staff Corresnondent BERLIN, Aug. 29.—Chancellor Adolf Hitler has embarked on a newbold scheme to minimize the overlap in the Nazi regime's machinery and tighten his dictatorial control on Germany, it was indicated today. The Nazi chancellor’s recent conferences with Nazi leaders at the summer chancellory at Berchtesgaden, were regarded by well-in-formed observers as presaging vital in the party structure, tending to reduce overlapping bureaus in thi party and government. Steps already taken toward simplifying the government and strengthening its position include: 1. Revision of rules of legislative procedure to curb law-making prerogatives of individual members of the cabinet. 2. Withdrawal of economic commissars. 3. Dissolution of militant small retailers’ protective association. 4. Dissolution of auxiliary police. 5. Formation of a senate of “Nazi Elders"—corresponding to the grand council of Fascism in Italy. All important features of Nazi policy are to be submitted to this senate for final approval. It lately has become increasingly plain that Hitler himself has been surprised at the ease with which he has Nazified Germany. Contrary to his expectation that after the party seized technical leadership last January he would have to fight and maneuver for a year or more before he had consolidated the Nazis in power, Hitler has observed all opposition melt swiftly away in the first six months of his regime. CHILD DIES UNDER~AUTO Girl Jumps on Spare Tire; Car Backed Over Her. By Vnitcd Press PLYMOUTH, Ind., Aug. 29.—A short ride Elizabeth Veclotch, 13, took on the spare tire of her father’s automobile caused her death here Monday night. The girl jumped on the tire as her father, Andrew Veclotch, backed ! the car out of a garage. She fell into the machine’s path and was killed instantly.

r-AINT SEEN ' I 111 BE BACK IN Mr % ■ 1 'BROADWAY TO ? A SWELL PICTURE! , UCKIt COOftt mtHOABWAT ' 1 to HOLLYWOOD" •) IOtWJ/

MEXICO WILL MAKE TARIFF CONCESSIONS Far-Reaching Results Expected in Trade Accord With U. S. (Copyright. 1933. by United Press) MEXICO CITY, Aug. 29.—Farreaching tariff concessions will be made by Mexico in reciprocal trade accord negotiations with the United States, the United Press learned authoritatively today. In return for such provision, the Mexican government will expect more favorable tariff treatment in the United States on vegetables, fruit and cattle, it was indicated reliably. These facts were brought out when it became known that a draft of the reciprocal trade treaty which Mexico plans to propose as the basis of treaty negotiations with Washington is nearing completion by a committee of experts here. Preliminary diplomatic conversations already have been held by representatives of the two governments.

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BLAST VICTIMS AT DEATH DOOR One Man Succumbs After Whiting Explosion: Trio Critically Hurt. By United Press WHITING. Ind.. Aug. 29—Three of nineteen men burned in a gasoline explosion at the Standard Oil Company refinery here remained in a serious condition in an East Chicago hospital today. One man, Mike Balog, 60, Whiting. died of burns shortly after the blast and the others were expected to recover. Those on the critical list today were A. R. Weis. 29, Huntington Park* Cal.; Andrew Garbor. 29. Gary, and Albert Walzak, 28, Chicaeo. Weis, an employe of the Pacific Pump Company of California, was repairing equipment in the unit

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where the explosion occurred. Hi* wife and brother were expected her# today by airplane from Huntington Park. Plant officials said the unit in which the blast* occurred had been closed for repairs last week. They could give qp explanation for the explosion. First medical degree conferred In the United States was in 1770.

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