Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 167, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1933 — Page 10
PAGE 10
LINK COPELAND WITH PRISON GANG. SAY COPS Witnesses Are Said to Have Identified Prisoner as Auto Passenger. • Continued From Pa** One) joined the Rang: of escaped convicts who headed into Ohio and later frrrri Dillinger. Copeland has been definitely linked with the convicts in Ohio for. according to Captain Leach, he was introduced to a brother of one of the convicts, Fred Pierpont. in Hamilton, 0., as a ‘'Mr. Charrington.” Leave Expires Friday Copeland was brought to Indianapolis on a five-day leave of absence from the state prison. He will be taken back to Michigan City Friday. Captain Leach said. The leave expires Friday. Captain Leach brough Copeland to the state house today for a “nice, quiet talk ’ in a room at state police headquarters. The state police head also planned to bring bank employes from Daleville and Montpelier, where holdups were perpetrated, to Indianapolis, in an attempt to identify Copeland as one of the participants. The police guard at headquarters was augmented last night after two false police calls had sent radio patrol cars to 5300 North Pennsylvania street and a store at Shelby and Carson avenue. Stand Guard With RifL* The North Pennsylvania call was to the effect that a man had been shot by a woman, while the south side call was an A. D. T. alarm. Police feared that, the calls might be attempts to draw officers from police headquarters in an effort to weaken the force guarding Copeland and that an attempt would be made to free Copeland. Throughout questioning of Copeland yesterday and today, officers with rifles stood guard over the prisoner at police headquarters. Witnesses to the Dillinger getaway in Lima are expected to come here m an attempt to link Copeland with the escape of Dillinger. Six witnesses of the Central National bank holdup at, Greencastle failed to identify Copeland as one of the bandits. Copeland, however, was identified hy A. C. Crays, president of the Rockville bank, and his son, Roland, as one of the bandits who robbed his institution of S2OO.
PRISON REVOLT HALTED. STRICT GUARD IS KEPT Move to Prevent Repetition of Pennsylvania Uprising. By f nitcil Piths Philadelphia, Nov. 22.—Their rebellion quelled by the menacing guns of crack motor bandit patrolmen. Sullen prisoners in the Eastern state penitentiary today were kept under strict guard as the result of the most serious disorder in the prison’s history. Wrecked machinery and firescarred workshops gave evidence of the violence of a disturbance late yesterday which necessitated the summoning of city policemen and a fire company to assist guards in subduing the riotous convicts. Several shots echoed over the walls during the noisy demonstration, but prison officials said no one was injured. JUDGE LETS MAN OUT TO HOUSE HIS BEES Drunken Driver Gets Release to Put Away Insects. By t nitrrl Press FOND DU LAC, Wis.. Nov. 22 - Because his bees had not yet been put in their winter quarters, Walter Wcigert, serving a sixty-day sentence in jail her for drunken driving. was given a reprieve of several da vs. Weigert told Judge H. M. Fellenz that he would lose fifteen hives if the bres were not housed. Weigert was released for three days and then returned to jail to serve out the remainder of his term.
BRONX CHEERS MAKE TERM IN JAIL LONGER Intoxication Defendant Arouses Anger of Judge. By ( nited Pi tt* ABERDEEN. Wash.. Nov. 22.—Police Judge R. E. Taggart heard evidence indicating I. A. Ryals. Aberdeen. was drunk and fined him sls. Ryals tossed back his head and issued a robust Bronx cheer. Angered, the judge added ten days in jail. Again Ryals gave the salute. The judge increased the sentence to thirty days. Ryals Bronx cheered again. The sentence went to sixty days. The jailer hauled him out of the courtroom before he could sputter himself into jail for a longer period. DIGS UP ANCIENT PICK Old Instrument of Soil Believed to Be 30fl Years Old. By l nited Press PLYMOUTH. Mass., Nov 22.—David Zavalcofsky, while digging a post hole In his yard, unearthed a pick believed to be 300 years old. His home is a short distance from where the Pilgrims landed.
IS THERE ANYTHING WORSE THAN A BACKACHE? A continuous backache takes all the joy out of living. If accompanied by irregular urination and a tired, nervous feeling. backache may be caused by kidney or bladder trouble. Diurex Pills will help on s they helped Mm. Lillian Noble, Greenock. Pa. She net: “Diurex will help any one suffering from a backrho caused hr kidney trouble. 1 hare taken two boxes es Diurex and my backache la almost gene I would pay. gladly, twice u raurh aa tea ask for Diurex. if necessary, because it la e wonderful medicine.”
ONE SLAP—SI
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One dollar will recompense Miss Grace Williams. Hollywood writer, for the bruise inflicted bv the hefty fist of Mary McCormic, opera singer, but it'll take a million to wipe away the humiliation. So avers Miss Williams <above) rubbing her bruise as she poses for the cameraman, after she had filed a suit for *1.000,001 against the diva in Los Angeles.
Hoaxers Loose Housewives Here Are Victims of Racket.
TNDIANAPOLIS housewives are -*■ being victimized by anew racket. Here is how it goes: The doorbell rings. Mrs. Housewife answers and finds a young man on the threshold. Young Man: Have youse seen any guys from Noter Dame? <or Indiana, or De Pauw. or Wabash, or any other nearby college.) Housewife: Why, no, I haven't. Young Man: I’m from Noter Dame, see. I gotta chance to'take a round-the-world cruise on one of them floating colleges. ’After that "The New York Times" will hire me as a reporter. It's a contest. All I gotta do is get more magazine subscriptions than the other guys. Just sign here and give a young fella a chance to travel and get a start in life on “The New York Times.’’ The Indianapolis Times asked “The New York Times” about the matter. “It is a hoax, pure and simple,” came the prompt response. BONES BELIEVED PART OF MONSTER’S SPINE One Piece Found in Texas Too Heavy For Lifting, By 1 nited Press HOUSTON. Tex., Nov. 22.—Out of the shallow w'ater along the banks of the San Jacinto river near here has come something that may date back to the time when great monsters roamed the earth. While searching for ferns. L. B. Abbott and Raymond Cage found a section of bone that, apparent'? once formed part of the vertebrae of a big creature. Near by was another piece too heavy to lift. The find was reported to the Smithsonian Institution. TURKS WILL USE GAS IN WAR AGAINST DOGS Many Still Roam Despite Slaying of 150,000. By I nited Press ISTANBUL. Nov. 22—A dog’s life in Istanbul is cheap—but not for the Turkish government. Sharing the Moslem aversion to dogs, authorities here have spent millions trying to be rid of them, even paying a bounty on each dead dog’s tail. Though 150,000 have been killed in the last fifteen years, bands of them still rove the streets at night. The city has now decided to try gas. Automobiles are forbidden In Bermuda.
jJBkCOLDS w. FASTER Colds are too serious to trifle with. So take something that tens of thousands of people will tell you is the fastest, surest way to get rid of a cold. All vou do is take a couple of HILL'S COLD TABLETS and a couple of glasses of water now and then. Relief comes so Ql ICK because these tablets do the three things necessary to break up a cold. They clear poisons from ssstem, check fever, ease away ache and pain, and fight off cold germs that infest you. ALL AT ONCE. Thus your cold goes and you feel like anew person in a itffy. Now get rid of coldstbis PROVEN. FASTER WAY. You’ll say it’s marvelous. (>et HILL'S CASCARA QUININE tablets in the RED TIN BOX from any dntggist. Mil | CASCARA I Lblm w quinine
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COMPANY UNION WINS FIGHT IN INDIANA PLANT Newcastle Workers Cast 295 Ballots for Collective Bargaining. By l nilrrl Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 22.—Victory for a company union in an election of workers representatives at the Newcastle <lnd.) plant of the Ingersoll Steel and Disc Company was announced today by the national labor board. The election was supervised by the board to settle a fight between the company's Mutual Benefit and Representation Association and the Amalgamated Association on Iron. Steel and Tin Workers, which is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. In the ballot 295 workers voted for collective bargaining through the Mutual Benefit Association and seventy supported the A. F. of L. union.
FLIGHT RECORD TO BE CHECKED Settle’s Instrument'', to Be Unsealed at Capital by Experts. By T. nited Pres* WASHINGTON. Nov. 22.—Commander T. W. G. Settle's barograph was scheduled to be unsealed and calibrated by the bureau of standards this afternoon to see how far he and Major Chester Fordney soared in the stratosphere Monday. Settle said the mercury in the tube indicated they had reached 59,000 feet, more than a mile in excess of the altitude attained by August Piccard. If this is borne out, the SettleForney ascension probably will be accepted as a world record by the Federation Aviation Internationale, because the ascension of three Soviet balloonists, who claimed recently to have reached 62,000 feet was not recognized. The Soviets were not associated with the federation. Commander Settle brought his barograph and scientific instruments used in the study of the cosmic ray to Washington late yesterday from the marshes near Bridgeton, N. J., where he brought down his stratosphere balloon Monday night. MINISTER JOINS POLICE Massachusetts Pastor Will Occupy Pulpit as Usual. By United, Press BOSTON. Nov. 22.—The Rev. Ernest A. Thorsell, minister of the Union Baptist church of South Foxboro, recently was made a member of the uniformed division of the Massachusetts state police. He expects to preach at the church as usual on Sundays. ARTIST. 83. IS WINNER Wisconsin Woman Began Painting at Age of 17. By United Press JACKSON, Mich., Nov. 22.—Mrs Ellen Binet, winner of several county art contests, is 83 years old. She has painted 1,000 pictures since she was 17.
Miss Chambers Highly Stresses the Use of jljP^B PASTEURIZED MILK 1 iBB at the Times Cooking School R L--, w| A oic Being Held MURAT TEMPLE 1 mmmßr * j Must 1 Pass • % 9 M°st A |l Tests ’ iy® E\n:V family is interested in health of each SBS( ' : individual member KB U and therefore should he certain that the f r ' SpS j milk supply is safe- 88H guarded by pasteur- 99 ** ization. 8 Value of the Milk Is Unchanged by Pas- 'A PASTEUR IZEJ) HJ<
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
COMING HERE AGAIN
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Wiliam Hard
A vivid picture of the international economic conlerence in London last summer will be painted in words Friday at English's theater when William Hard, news commentator for the National Broadcasting Company, speaks on the Town Hall program. Mr. Hard is a repeat celebrity on the Town Hall lyceum. He appeared here last season. “I shall talk on American bread and butter, focusing attention on the fact that the butter will perhaps never be quite so thick as we would like to have it here until the bread is everywhere more effectively baked and distributed,” he writes of his lecture.
Better Cooking Jack frost Bj The manv housewives To.those laattending the (.unking dies who are School conducted bv this not attending filplplps mk "** newspaper, learn from the school, RUTH CHAMBERS message 'Of Domestic Sc ience "Jack Frost Is the Quality Sugar Authority of America.” the advantage of using J<wk Frost is made ot only 100% Jack Frosf—loo% pure c * ne sugar pure, uniform,fine. cane sugar for all cooking There's a Jack Frost Sugar and table uses. The right for every purpose: kind of sugar alwaysmakes Granulated, Powdered, Brown, Conbetter cooking easier. fectioners (xxxx), Tablet and the Trump Tablet Novelty Package. Jack Frosts. Refined by The National Sugar Refining To. of N. J. 1-4.8
NRA COAL CODE BOARDS NAMED BY ROOSEVELT Harrington and Woodward Appointed to Indiana. Illinois Section. By J'nited Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 22.—The NRA embarked today on its effort to enforce codes by completing organization of compliance authorities for the bituminous coal industry'. President Roosevelt appointed Administrator Hugh S. Johnson. Federal Judge George W. Anderson of Boston, and Fred G. Tryon, bureau of mines economist, as a national board of three to carry out provisions of the soft coal code. General Johnson revealed announcement of other compliance systems would be made “very soon.” Presidential members of the eastern division coal code authority will be Wayne P. Ellis, Washington; George Anderson, New York; Walter A. Jones, Pittsburgh; Benedict Crowell, Cleveland; George B. Hardesty, Fairmount. W. Va.; Frank L. Poindexter, Cincinnati, and Fred K. Prosser, Bluefield, W. Va. Those on the Indiana-lUinois authority will be Joseph Harrington, Chicago and Franck C. Woodward, Terre Haute. Monte Lehman, Birmingham. was appointed for the south; Arthur Vail, Denver, for the west, and Robert S. Lemon, Kansas
City, for Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas and Oklahoma. V The impartial, employe and employer members, in that order of the Indiana-Illinois labor boards are: John A. Lapp, Chicago; Ora E. Gassaway, Brazil, Indiana, J. H. Cartwright, Terre Haute, Ind. Seventy-five thousand girls in New York city were without jobs, homes, or sufficient food in the early part of 1933.
Indiana's Finest Shoe Store £j\ Queen Quality Shoes /& |R|pvNv “The Essence of Good Taste " // w) “The proof of the pudding / Jfc' eat * n £*” / 1 The proof of fine styling, / superior construction and li l&s, luxury of comfort in Queen /jdjP' /MI Quality Shoes has been test- jg* " ed and approved by the women of the nation. V *5 to *B-50 IHDmNfIPOLIJ TiMEI COOKINC SCHOOL TvCiar-a.'t Theater November 21 + 22 + 23
noriW, YOUR V KITCHEN See Baker Bros. Display at the Cooking School —*""* j This Large, New Kitchen Cabinet With every modern convenience. <l* (1 Choice of colors—green or ivory. 0 W •£" Terms, If Desired yr BAKER BROS. Opposite the Courthouse. Est Over 40 Years
MUSEUM TO GET OLD TERRE HAUTE ENGINE 80-\>ar-Old Hand-Pumper to Be Placed With Lindbergh Plane. By Times Special TERRE HAUTE. Nov. 22 —Carl W. Mitman. Smithsonian Institute head curator, was here yesterday to arrange the transporting of this city's old hand-pumper fire engine
NOV. 32, 1983
[to the institute, to be placed in th same room with Lindbergh's famous plane. “Spirit of St. Louis.” The old engine was brought to Terre Haute in 1855, and was used by volunteer companies until 185 r when a steam pumper replaced it, and it was sold to Jasper. Ind. It was bought back, as a relic, in 1904 by public subscription. The dragon fly is able to fly backward as fast as forward.
