Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1934 Edition 02 — Page 3

MAY 71934

TECHNICAL IS PREPARING FOR 'SUPREME DAY' Grounds Will Be Open to Visitors on 18th Anniversary. The eighteenth anniversary of Supreme day will be celebrated Tuesday, at Arsenal Technical high school when the school will be open all day to visitors, who will have an opportunity to visit classes and see students at work. Open-air privileges afforded by the 76-acre campus will be emphasized throughout the day's program. Art classes will be sketching on the campus, and surveying, botany, zoology, and other classes also will make their usual use of the campus facilities. The three-acre wild flower garden located on the nortb portion of the campus will be open to visitors. Recreational activities wil be held continuously from 11:30 to 4 on the campus. A physical education exhibition Including mass calisthenics, a May-pole dance, and folk-dances, will be presented on the quadrangle from 4 to 5. Twilight athletic exhibitions featuring the school's athletic stars will be held from 6 to 6:45 on the athletic field. A military training review’ will be staged by a crack military unit from 6 45 to 7 o'clock Following this, a band concert will be presented on the quadrangle until 7:40. A musical by both chorus and orchestra groups will be given from 7:50 until 8:30 in the auditorium, the program consisting of selections w hich have been studied during the year. In order that fathers also can visit the school, all building and classrooms will be open from 7 to 9:30 with teachers in their usual places and many pupils assisting. STRIKE IS AVERTED BY BUS UNION AGREEMENT Motor Coach Company and Drivers Come to Terms. TK People's Motor Coach Company and Division No. 995, Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employes of America, yesterday climaxed six months of negotiation with the signing of a contract between the union and the company. This action, which automatically averted a threatened strike, was hailed with pleasure by represent a • fives of both the company and the union. Both expressed themselves as *'rirt''rmined to devote their best efforts to bringing to a successful conclusion the great development program" for modernizing and rehabilitating transportation here. U. S. BUILDING PLAN LAUDED BY C. OF C. Proposal Would Stimulate City’s Business, Group Reports. Business stimulation in the city should result from the proposed federal program of financial aid to home and building improvement projects, the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce announced yesterday. As building improvements in the city should aggregate several million dollars, the immediate result would be an increase in both employment and the general business volume, the buildings and trade committee of the chamber declared.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: , W p Anderson. 3703 North Delaware Street. Ford V-8 coupe. 42-16 P. from in front of 3703 North Delaware street.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Hoosier Coffee Company. 1417 Southeastern avenue. Ford truck, found in rear of 519 East Twenty-second street. W F Anderson. 5703 North Delaware street. Ford eoupe. found at New Jersey street and Massachusetts avenue E Barrett. 1317 Pleasant street Oldsmobile coach, found at 901 Massachusetts avenue. Robert Short. 4318 Broadway. Ford coach, found in front of 313 North Pennsvitama street. Indiana public service commission. Studebaker sedan, found in front of 305 West Vermont street. DRIVES DOCTORS AWAY Falher Refuses to I.et Him Treat Daughter, Who Dies. Ffl J niti il I'ri * PRINCETON. W. Va.. May 19 Charged with attempting to kill two doctors who came to his house to treat his year-old child, Cecil Travis of Princeton has geen released on SI,OOO bail for his appearance before a grand jury in July. The child died the next morning after Travis had driven the physicians away. OPERA TO BE STAGED “Don Pasquale” Will He Presented at Caleb Mills Hall. The opera. "Don Pasquale,” will be given at 8:15 tonight at Cale} Mills hall by students of Jordan Conservatory. Tonight's performance will be the final event in the first annual May music festival staged by the conservatory and Butler university. Four Communists Beheaded R<< f II if I’d /’rr** HAMBURG. Germany. May 19 Four Communists, conyicted of killing a Nazi storm trooper and two bystanders, were beheaded today. The death sentences of four others, found guilty of the same crime, were commuted to life imprisonment. Sclentech Meeting Set Frank Jordan of the Indianapolis Water Company will be the speaker at the Scientech Club luncheon in the Columbia Club Monday. He will speak on the Indiana internal improvement act. Business Nears Normal By Tim' Fprcial PITTSBURGH. May 19.—Business activity in this district during the week ended May 5, rose 1.5 points to 70.5 per cent of computed normal, the Pittsburgh bureau of business research reported.

Indiana Sportsmen Draft Broad Program for 1935 Legislature

Game wardens with forty-nine bass, victims of fish slaughter with pitchforks.

Laws Desired Outlined After Discussion of 139 Subjects. BY WILLIAM F. COLLINS Time, Special Writer There are a number of antique laws on our statute books relating to fish and game. A large number of Indiana sportsmen have complained about the inadequacy of the old laws to meet modern conditions Up to the moment it has been my experience in trying to get a revision of these laws through the legislature that conservation subjects were the last order of business and the most carefully thought out bills w’ere keyholed, pigeonholed, pocketed or tabled or done something to that politicians know about when they are not interested. Then for two more years we struggle along with inadequate remedies looking pleasant and waiting for the next session always hoping and seldom accomplishing. There promises to be a different outcome when the next legislature meets. Eighteen men. representing eighteen different divisions of Indiana, each man the spokesman of the sportsmen's clubs from his division met in Turkey Run park and after the longest legislative session I ever sat in, worked out a program for the state, after discussion of 139 different subjects, all pertaining to present fish and game laws. Out of this w’elter of information there doubtless will develop anew code of legal rules for the Indiana conservation department. It is not possible to go deeply into the subject in the short space of this column. I will endeavor to briefly outline some of the more important aspects of the future law’s, if not completely in this article, then in some future one. In the order of their importance, it strikes me that a law’ giving the

The Romantic and Beautiful LOVE LETTERS OF DICKENS

Two Amazing Interludes in a Great Artist’s Life — BY H. H. HARPER

WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE Probably the most amazing love romance history records is that of Charles Bickens for Maria Beadnell. It projects into the drama of Dickens' life two amazing "interludes." The “First Interlude” terminated when the beautiful and wealthy Maria rejected the youthful and then unknown but brilliant Dickens, after three years of ardent courtship. The astounding "Second Interlude” was begun twenty-two years later. His love for Maria, Dickens had always carried deep in his heart. He was now a world figure, wealthy, feted by royalty. Maria, still beautiful had married a staid sober business man named Winter. She wrote to Dickens. The old love flamed anew and produced a series of wonderful love letters in Dickens’ own handwriting, one of which literary authorities pronounce the "greatest love letter ever written.” Dickens now cools and wishes to withdraw, but Maria has the compromising letters. Maria now plays her last card. IT requires no stretch of the imagination to picture the train of romantic hopes to which this bit of news gave rise in the mind of Mrs. Winter; that she discreetly waited two months and a half for conditions to calm down, before undertaking to pierce Dickens with her last Cupid's arrow. Recalling how his emotions had been stirred three years before by her letter with its touching reference to the old days at Lombard street and also how her sister Anne had always sympathized with Charles and had held his friendship until she died, in May, 1836 (three years after her wedding day), the persevering Maria again tried to revive his tender feelings by sending him a poem written by Anne —the last remaining conciliatory weapon at her command. Thus method of reawakening a lost love was not original with Maria; it has been resorted to thousands of times, before and since. In the letter accompanying the poem she asked Dickens to meet her in Liverpool as she was staving at her father's house nearby. Instead of bringing the “cold reproachful” answer she had made to his last boyhood appeal, it brought a warm, friendly reply, with a touching reference to the old past: that having shrewdly penetrated her designs he pleaded that the press of "business” made him so "self denying and heroic” that he could not see her. BBS BUT with his letters still in her hands, and his domestic eruption fresh in the public mind. Maria was still a possible menace; therefore, after discouraging her all he could, he discreetly dropped the hint that he hoped to see her in London. Gad's Hill Place. Higham by Rochester. Kent. Monday. Sixteenth August. 1858. My Dear Mrs. Winter: I have read poor dear Anne's prayer with great sorrow, and with many emotions of sadly affectionate remembrance. It was written, no doubt, under a presentiment of Death but it must always be remembered that such a presentiment often exists when it fails to be fulfilled; and it is very commonly engendered in the state of mind belonging to the condition in which she composed the prayer. It would give me great pleasure to see you at Liverpool, if I had the least confidence in my own freedom for a moment under the circumstances which will take me there. But I have so much business to transact at times, and have to keep myself so quiet at other times, and have so many people [

department discretionary power to regulate hunting and fishing by zones leads the list. If that law is passed, it will be possible for* the administration to open or close the season by giving ample notice of intention in any locality where the game or the fish have been done to death, either by the human element or the natural As an example, if natural disaster or human hands take all the small mouth bass out of a certain stream, leaving it barren of that species, it will be possible to close that stream on the taking of small mouth bass, restock it and hold the season closed until nature has restored the balance That Is a common sense thing to do. It does no one injury; on the contrary it makes for a more universal supply of game fish. Tne same thing would apply to quail, pheasants, ducks or w’hat not. It would also protect fur when any species is likely to become extinct so far as a described area is concerned. Zoning the state also would include opening and closing the regular seasons according to latitude and to yearly climatic conditions. In seme seasons the bass spawn tw’o or three weeks late and under the present laws are fished for when they are still heavy with spawn. It is also recognized that the south end of the state is from two to three w’eeks earlier in season than the northern end. The picture accompanying this article shows another result of an inadequate and possibly obsolete law. The old pitchfork bill that was designed to aid farmers to take coarse fish out of Indiana streams w’ith an unmodified pitchfork W’as used by predatory fishermen to do the damage illustrated. Here are forty-nine bass pitchforked to death in the Tippecanoe river below’ Norway dam. This law should be modified or changed to meet modern conditions. Personally, visiting the site of the

to give directions to, and make arrangements with (four travel with me) that I see no one while lam on this Tour, and have to be always grimly self-denying and heroic. So I shall hope to see you in London, at some time when I am in a less virtuous, and less hurried and worried condition. With my love to Ella, and kindest regard to Mr. Winter, Ever affectionately yours. CHARLES DICKENS. B B B SHE must have got a sensational thrill, if only for a moment, out of his facetious remark about hoping to see her in London when he was in a “less virtuous condition”; but there is no record, so far as she is concerned that he ever relaxed from his determined self denial. There was another meeting or two, perhaps—meetings that held little for her, seeing that the cause was hopeless. With only her garland of fading memories she could not compete with the younger and more engaging beauties of society and the stage for such moments as he could spare from his work. A few months later she was over-taken by another calamity, and no longer able to claim his love, she was forced to appeal to his charity. Her husband had failed in business and she turned to her old sweetheart to ask if he could with a word, help them out of their difficulties. B B B IF it humiliated her to ask that aid. it must have chagrined her even more to receive the following letter of sympathy and sound advice in return: Brighton, Saturday, November 13th, 1858. My dear Mrs. Winter: I have been so constantly and rapidly changing from place to place during the past week, that I am only just now in receipt of the intelligence of your misfortune. With the utmost sincerity and earnestness of which my heart is capable. I condole with you upon it. and assure you of my true sympathy and friendship. It has distressed me greatly. Not because I am so worldly or so unjust as to couple the least reproach or blame with a reverse that I do not doubt to have been unavoidable, and that I know to be always easily possible of occurrence to the best and most fortunate of men, but because I know you feel it heavily. I wish to Heaven it were in my power to help Mr. Winter to any new opening in life. But you can hardly imagine how powerless I am in any such case. My own work in life being of that kind that I must always do it with my own unassisted hand and head. I have such rare opportunities of placing any one, that for years and years I have been seeking in vain to help in this way a friend of the old days when the old house stood unchanged in Lombard street. To this hour I have not succeeded, though I have strenuously tried my hardest, both abroad and at home. Commercial opportunities, above all. are so far removed from me. that I dare not encourage a hope of my power to serve Mr. Winter with my good word, ever coming within a year s journey of my will and wish to do it. But I really think that your father, who could do much in such a case without drawing at all heavily upon his purse, might be induced to do what—l may say

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

bass slaughter shown in the picture for the last three years, I can vouch fbr the fact these forty-nine bass are but a tithe of the game fish taken yearly in Indiana streams by pitchforkers. That is w’here your sport goes, you law abiding fisherman. You pay your money to take a fishing outing and find that the man who never sleeps has been there ahead of you with dynamite, nets, pitchforks and other wholesale fish kilfcng devices. Then you return home and "cuss'’ the state for charging you $1 to fish, but gives you no fish. We will have a better control over the bait seller w’ho bootlegs young game fish for minnows. Nets will be licensed in about the same manner as the present Michigan law. It has proved as impossible to keep nets out of personal possession as to prohibit whisky. When you can’t lick the situation, join it by giving the ow’ner of a net a license to use it under local club regulation and keep the nets in the county clerk's office. We have done the same thing after a fashion with liquor. Dynamiting will draw a heavier penalty and some other gross violations of the fish and game laws will be dealt with more rigidly. Spading up the weed beds in our rivers for mussel taking will be taboo except under game wardens’ supervision. Wider latitude will be given authorized game and fish clubs to take predatory fish, to raise and sell fish or game to the state for propagating purposes, and there will be a law to prohibit the sale of black bass no matter where they were caught. Indiana is one of the three states now permitting that. The legislature will know that Indiana sportsmen -want these things, there are more than 40.000 of them tied into club units and when 40,000 men speak even the statehouse dome leans over to listen.

to you Maria—it is no great stretch of sentiment to call his duty. Has not Margaret great influence with him? Have not you some? And don't, you think that if you were to set yourself steadily to exert whatever influence you can bring to bear upon him, you would do the best within your reach for your husband, your child, and yourself? Is it not all important that you should try your utmost with him, at this time? Forgive my recommending this, if you have so anticipated the recommendation as to have done all that possiby can be done to move him. But what you tell me about George seems so strange, so hard, and so ill balanced, that I can not avoid the subject. I write in the greatest haste, being overwhelmed by business here. On Monday I hope to be at Gad’s Hill, and to remain either there or at Tavistock House for months to come. I enclose a few lines to Mr. Winter, and am ever, •**. Your faithful friend. CHARLES DICKENS. (Copyright. 1934, John F. Dille Cos.) In tomorrow's great episode the amazing “Second Interlude” draws to a close.

Pruning Most Important in Growing of Shrubs

3EFORE AFTER How to prune your shrubs. You have to be ruthtess in cutting away the twigs, if you want a firm, full plant.

This is tht eighth of a series of articles by Donald Gray, famous landscape consultant, on how to make a beautiful garden of your back yard, BY DONALD GRAY NEA Landscape Consultant. A SHRUB will live forever if it is well fertilized, kept free from disease and pruned properly. Pruning is the real secret of its life, and yet the average gardener seems to think that if he clips the ends off and takes out the dead wood every year that is all the pruning necessary. It is not sufficient to keep a shrub healthy. The manner of pruning is most important. Some rules should be learned by every one who handles a pair of pruning shears. They are relatively the most damaging weapon a man can hold, for the good of growing plants, unless he knows what he is about. B B B 'T'HE first job is to take out dead wood. But if the plant has been pruned properly the year before, barring accidents, there should be no dead wood. Next, take out old wood all the way to below the surface of the ground. This is hardest to do with a large healthy shrub. It may have been cut back a few

INJURIES FROM FALL FATAL TO CITY RESIDENT Burial Is Set Monday for Virgil G. Nuding, 32, Labor Foreman. Virgil G. Nuding, 32, living on South Emerson avenue, died yesterday at Methodist hospital of injuries sustained when he fell from a construction scaffolding Tuesday night. Mr. Nuding was a foreman employed on construction work on the I addition to the Wm. H. Block Company store. He suffered injuries of the head, and fractures of three vertebrae and both shoulders. Funeral services will be held in the home of his mother, Mrs. Cir.T i Nuding, 526 North Bancroft street, j at 2 Monday afternoon. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mr. Nuding was a member of the j Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Edith Nuding; two children. Jean and Jerry; his mother, three sisters, Mrs. Lorine King. Hamburg. N. Y.; Mrs. Lela Johnson. Indianapolis, and Mrs. j Mary Arford, Indianapolis, and a brother, Raymond Nuding, Anderson. Mrs. Gertrude Yorn Dies The body of Mrs. Gertrude Yorn. 64. New York, former resident of Indianapolis, will be brought here for funeral services and burial. Mrs. Yorn died Thursday in her home in New York. Services will be held at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Toyozo W. Nakarai, 4225 Guilford avenue, at 3 tomorrow, with the Rev. William F. Rothenburger officiating. Burial will be at 9 Monday in Crown Hill. Survivors besides Mrs. Nakarai are j two brothers, Charles E. Carriger Indianapolis, and P. M. Carriger Los Angeles, and a sister, Mrs. John Berryhill, Evanston, 111. Edna List Rites Set Funeral services for Mrs. Edna Klepfer List, 32. of 5353 East Thirtieth street, will be held at 10:30 tomorrow’ in the Pilgrim church. Burial will be in Oaklandon. Mrs. List died Thursday in her home, following a year’s illness. Surviving are the widow’er, Garnet List; six children, Virgil, Dorothy, Thelma. Norma, Dean and Eugene List; five brothers, Dallas, Fairpst, Vernon. Denver, and Kyrie Klepfer, and two sisters, Mrs. Lora Jamieson and Mrs. Maud Robbins, all of Indianapolis. Burial Monday for Mrs. Taylor The funeral of Mrs. Clara B. Taylor. 41, of 403 West Ninth street, | who died Thursday, will be held at 2 Monday in the C. M. C. Willis & , Son mortuary. Burial will be in j Crown Hill. She had lived in Indianapolis tw’enty-three years. Surviving her are a sister, Mrs. Willie Esters, Niagara Falls, N. Y., and an uncle, Tucker Palmer, Horsecave, Ky. NAZI FUNDS LINKED TO U. S. BY BANK FIRMS Hitlerites Contributed to Agents, Is Intimation. By United rrests NEW YORK, May 19.—Banking records allegedly showing transfers of Nazi funds to agents in the United States w’ere submitted voluntarily to the Dickstein congressional subcommittee investigating Nazi activities. They were produced by six international banking firms. Representative J. H. McCormack of Massachusetts, head of the investigating committee, said: "Many activities w’hich the government previously knew’, but concerning which it lacked proof, have been brought to light. We now are getting the proofs we need.” §IOO,OOO Fire in Cincinnati By United Press CINCINNATI, May 19.—Fire in the George H. Pellens Company today caused damage approaching SIOO,OOO and destroyed several tons of green coffee, tea and spices.

years ago. so that healthy stems have grown from the cut end; but take it out completely. The vigorous new shoots from the roots will keep the plant everlasting. Do not leave just last year's growth or even the third year's, but any large stem five years old has served its purpose; cut it out. Do not take all of them out in ond" year. Take only one or two. BBS IF the shrub has grown out of bounds, reduce the length of the branches. There are two important rules to follow here: Always cut close to a healthy bud on the stem and never cut a naturalistic growing flowering shrub in a ball or formal outline. Take the ends of long branches off at different lengths. It is important to thin out some weak growth coming up from the roots. Take these off below the ground, but do not take them all off. or the plant will be leggy. Let the plant look natural, after it has been pruned. The time to prune a shrub depends on when the plant blooms. A rule that never fails is to prune it just after it has bloomed, no matter what season it is. Use a sharp knife or sharp shears and make clean cuts on the diagonal*

CADLE BAPTISTRY WILL BE I DEDICATED

*^ZaSSSSSEZZS2SSSmSZmmm!m2mSmSSSS^SSS^^^^S^S!SSSSESSSSSSSSS^^ §9|!s£3j& ’•• V : ~i> :

The new baptistry at Cadle tabernacle will be dedicated tomorrownight. when more than 150 persons will be baptized by E. Howard Cadle. The baptistry has a background of sand carving on glass, by Ivan Pogue. It is illuminated by underwater lights.

Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet.’

By United Press LAFAYETTE. May 19.—Samuel Quaco. Civil war veteran who spent six months in Libby prison, the record of which added to the horrors of the conflict, entered upon the ninety-second year of his life this week. His birthday w-as the occasion for a gathering of war comrades and other friends. Mr. Quaco enlisted for army service at the age of 18. on Aug. 24, 1861. A wound he incurred during the battle of Chiekamauga caused loss of his hearing.

tt tt tt Recount Suit Filed By Times Special GREENFIELD. May 19.—Chris H. Ostermeier, whe on the face of returns from the May 8 primary election was defeated for nomination for trustee of Sugar Creek tow-nship, has filed a contest suit in Hancock circuit court. Defendants are John S. Scott and John N. Snodgrass, also candidates. AH are Democrats. Returns gave Mr. Scott 282 votes, Mr. Ostermeier, 281, and Mr. Snodgrass, 56. The suit asks for a recount. Allegations are made that mistakes occurred in the count, a number of illegal votes cast and that votes which should have been counted w’ere ruled illegal.

In the Book Nook

BY WALTER D. HICKMAN WABASH college and Crawfordsville have not only been glorified but immortalized in a book, "In Freshman Year.” Many years ago, a father wrote a series of letters to his son and these became famous because the father was a self-made man. These letters became popular when published and started anew vogue in intimate recollections between father and son. Today the method changes and a son writes his experiences at Wabash college in his freshman year. All through the story, the influences of Bill Jackson’s father upon his son’s career as reflected in the choice of a small school is clearly and humanly told. Bill while living in New York had big shot ideas about going to Yale because the right fellows went there. B B B HIS father had enough money to send him to Yale and gratify his pride, but Bill’s father knew modern sons and he appreciated the values that a small college has-on a boy in his first year at college. It seems that the father knew what a tremendous loss it is not to know nature, ground, landscapes and homely people both on and off a campus. The father realized that the first year of school was a critical year in the life of any boy and even more so during a depression. You will meet Bill Jackson in John G. Coulter's "In Freshman Year,” published by the William H. Wise & Cos. It sells for $1.50. B B B THIS book is not a glorified college catalog but a modern boy’s own story how he found himself at Wabash in his freshman year during the depression. Wabash professors and coaches are named and Indianapolis plays an important part in the story.

STRANGE CUSTOMS Tea is served in the shops of the Orient as a greeting previous to the showing of their wares. Strange, Too— If you’ve never enjoyed the comforts of frosted air at beautiful Seville. SUNDAY DINNER Served 11 a. m. to 10 p. m. WASHINGTON ATMERIDIAN

Teacher to Retire By Times Special EL WOOD, May 19. With the close of the present term of the Elwood city schools, Mrs. Ella Jarrett, a teacher for forty-one years, will retire. She began her teaching career in Warrick county. She has been in Elwood fifteen years. a tt tt County Native Dies By Times Special FRANKLIN, May 19.—Funeral services were held today for Daniel Martin Forsyth, 73, a native of Johnson county, w’here he spent most of his life.

Here actual names and locations a£ used. ™ne of the finest chapters in the book is Bill’s w’orry about going "frat.” Every boy w’ho is going to college should read Bill’s worries and experiences. They are honest and real. Another fine chapter comes w’hen Bill went on a visit to Chicago and visited the University of Chicago. And Bill was glad to get back to Wabash and Crawfordsville. Here is a story of a modern boy growing up to be a man. He found his personality at Wabash. a a T\/TANY people have asked me where they could obtain a copy of Charles Dicken's "The Life of Our Lord” W’hich was recently published in The Times. Simon &; Schuster, Inc., has just published this important w’ofk in an attractive edition w’hich sells for $1.75, a popular “first edition” of a work which w’as written in 18461849 and published in 1934. There is a more expensive edition.

Real Estate Mortgages WE SOLICIT APPLICATIONS FOR PREFERRED MORTGAGE LOANS ON CITY PROPERTY. INTEREST RATE 6%—NO COMMISSION. THE INDIANA TRUST JS& SURPLUS $2, 000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN INDIANA

\ A Ot 1 V \ .x \ Watch and wait ? ? ? ?

PAGE 3

2 BADLY HURT AS AUTDRAMS TRAFFIC LIGHT Pair Rushed to Hospital After Early Morning Mishap Today. Colliding with a traffic light early this morning two persons riding in an auto at-Mcridian and Thirtieth streets sustained critical injuries. Mrs. Dorothy Ann Shepajd. 42. Kokomo, and Paul C. Gregory, 40. of 2818 North New Jersey street, suffered concussion of the brain and possible skull fracture. They were taken to city hospital. Miss R"1 Jones. 38. of Kokomo, suffered cuts and bruises about the legs and ankles. Three other persons were in the car at the time of the accident but left the scene before police arrived. The traffic light was not in operation at the time of the collision bir base lights were burning, it was reported. • Five other persons w’ere injured in auto accidents yesterday. ’ They were John Stewart, 48. of 4001 East Twenty-eighth street; Miss Helen Drain. 19. of 2549 South Pennsylvania street: Frankie Sharp. 2. of 1525 West Vermont street; George Callison. 25. of 1201 St. Pa”l ; street, and June Anderson, 6, of 4711 j Winthrop avenue. NEGRO ATTACKS GIRL: LYNCH MOB GATHERS Crowd Disperses When Told Suspect Is in Penitentiary. By T'nited Press GREENVILLE. S. C., May 19. A mob w’hich demanded of a 13-year-old white girl the identity of a Negro who criminally attacked her and later surrounded the jail in search of him. dispersed early today. The mob, told by the girl when j they surrounded her hoi*(' las', ! night that she had not identified j positively the Negro, then went to | the county jail, where heavilyarmed guards with tear gas awaitedE. E. Moser, jailer, and broadcasters over the local radio said the Negro w-as in the state penitentiary and the jail keys had been sent aw-ay. The mob slowly dispersed shortly I after midnight. OREGON CONGRESSMAN NAMED FOR GOVERNOR Rep. C. H. Martin Successful in Democratic Primary. By United Press PORTLAND. Ore., May 19.—Incomplete returns today indicated Congressman Charles H. Martin has won the Democratic nomination for Governor of Oregon. I In the Republican five-cornered J contest for the gubernatorial nomination, Joseph Dunne of Portland | was leading by a comfortable marj gin. Congressman James Mott, | meanwhile, showed an increasing | lead over his opponents for the Re- | publican congressional nomination j in the ,Second district. Fall Downstairs Proves Fatal By United Press FORT WAYNE, Ind., May 19. A fractured skull received in a fall downstairs at the home of a daughter near here, proved fatal to Mrs. I Catherine Fritz, 73, w’ho died in St. j Joseph's hospital here last night. City Boys Honored at Wabash By United Press CRAWFORDS VILLE, Ind., May 19.—A. C. Bomberger, Hammond,, and F. J. Horuff, Indianapolis, today were among ten Wabash college | students elected to Phi Beta Kappa, I honorary scholastic fraternity.