Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1936 — Page 20

Mechanics Ordér Speakers Named.

Combined sessions of the Daugh- _ ters of American and Junior Order

Jedse McClure, Indianapolis, is to]

give the welcoming address and Mrs. - Ollie = Towles, Nashville, Tenn. ‘Daughters of councillor, is to respond. Following introductions of national officers, Mrs. Louise Tegler, May“wood, orphans’ committee chairman, is to have charge of an en-

tertainment. A grand médrch and . dance are to be held Thursday

~ night, During closed sessions, Everett - Shuck, Marion, state councillor, is to have charge of the men’s meetings and Mrs. Opal Sears, Indianapolis, Daughters of America state councillor, is to have charge of the women’s sessions. Officers are to be elected and in-

America national

ae A. Ochiltree, 5840 Centralv, has been named editor of the iin University st t- directory this fall, according og an announcement by President James W. Putnam. Work on the direc tory is to begin immediately; Ochiltree is a senior and was graduated from Shortridge High: School. He was editor of the 1936 Drift, junior class yearbook at the. university.

RUSSIA EXEGUTES 16 IN TERRORIST PLOT

‘stalled in final meetings Friday].

morning. Clarence E. Meyers, Indianapolis, distriet deputy, is to be chairman of the American Mechanics sessions and Mrs. Daisy Hunter, Beech Grove, is general chairman of the Daughters of America meetings.

WELFARE DIRECTOR. ‘LEAVES LOCAL POST

Brig. Gen. James Murphy, Indiana district head of the Salvation Army for six years, was to leave today for Detroit to become divisional manager of the Michigan district. Appointment of his successor has not been made. Brig. Gen. J. C. * Elmquist, Indiana division general secretary, is to direct - Salvation Army work in this state until a permanent head is’ named, probably within six weeks, it was said. Brig. Gen. Murphy was described as an excellent business man, welfare worker and evangelist at meetings held in his honor yesterday. The Indianapolis advisory board met in tHe Columbia Club yesterday afternoon, a state officers’ meeting was held in the Lincoln yesterday afternoon, and a dinner also was held in the same hotel yesterday evening. Open house was held last night in state divisional headquarters.

WORKER KILLED. IN FIGHT OVER NICKEL

By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—A Negro

subway porter, who also is a préacher, will be arraigned today .on a charge of stabbing a young WPA worker to death for allegedly trying

~. to defraud the subway line of a 5-

cent fare. The porter, the Rev. Leroy Wertz, 36, killed Thomas Brennan, 28, in the sight of hundreds of persons in the Flushing subway station at the rush ‘hour last night. He saved himself from a mob by locking himself in a Dbandit-proof cashier's booth. Wertz said Brennan and three other WPA workers attempted to pass the subway. turnstiles without putting fares in the coin boxes. He remonstrated, he said, was attacked, and used a pocket penknife to defend himself. Brennan's companions said Wertz attacked without provocation.

NAZIS ARE TALKING (OF WAR WITH RUSSIA

BY United Press : BERLIN, Aug. 25.—Inspired articles in today’s newspapers attributed the increase to two years in . the term of compulsory army service to Russia’s strength and to the Spanish situation. In all the articles there-was only one reference to the possibility of War. The increase in the length @= service was emphasized as a defensive measure. Though it is not mentioned so much officially, there is much talk of the imminence of war with Russia. Nazi militiamen to whom a United Press corre- . spondent talked expressed the belief that war might start at any ame,

GAIN IS REPORTED BY NORTH SIDE REALTORS

~ Increased activity in residential

Others Await Trial Charged With Planning Slayings.

By United Press MOSCOW, Aug. 25. — Gregory Zinoviev and Leo Kamenev, two leaders of the October, 1917, mobs that established the Red Soviet government, and 14 other co-plotters against the regime, have been executed by firing squads, it was announced today. All 18 were convicted of fomenting murderous crimes against the state under the tutelage of Leon Trotsky, once co-dictator with Lenin and Stalin, but now in exile in Norway. Five other former members of the highest council await trial and probable execution. A sixth —Mikhail Tomsky, head of the state printing trust—committed suicide rather than face the charges. The executed, those arrested, and those under investigation comprise the principal and most capable followers of Leon Trotsky in his belief that the Soviet regime should have advocated and worked for worldwide revolution rather than seeking to establish Socialism in Russia so strongly that its enemies from without could not dislodge it.

FREIGHT LINE DEPOT IS TO OPEN MONDAY

A modern freight depot at 520 W. Ray-st, is to be opened Monday by Hayes Freight Lines, H. L. Buck,

local manager, announced today. The present depot. 630 Kentuckyav, is to be abandoned and all office equipment is to be moved to the new location. The new terminal is a one-story brick structure, 200 feet by 40 feet. A large aréa has heen

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