Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1937 — Page 26
PAGE 2
OFFICER LOSES 'GYGLE CONTROL,
IS BADLY HURT
Cosmos Sansone in Hospital With Possible Skull Fracture.
_MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE
TRAFFIC ARRESTS Speeding Running red light : Running preferential street . Reckless driving Improper parking Others
otorcycle officer and a: pedes
trian were in serious condition in| City Hospital today with injuries |
received in traffic accidents overnight. Five other persons treated for cuts and bruises. Patrolman Cosmos Sansone suf fered a possible skull fracture and | an injured back when he lost con“trol of his motorcycle at Illinois and | South Sts. The wheels were caught |
were
in a street car track, witnesses told | 2 police. 3 Hospital attendants said he was | in a semiconscious state and unable | to tell how the accident occurred. | He was found by a passing id | 1 |
ist lying on the pavement beside his maqtorcycle. The engine of the ma- | chine was still running, according to officers. Pedestrian Hurt
Mrs. Ada Withers, 49, of 315 N. Gray St., received serious head inJuries last night when struck by an automobile at 24th and Meridian Sts. Verne Drumen, 36, of 2344 N. Illinois St, who was not held by police, told officers he was turning west on 24th St., when Mrs. Withers! stepped in front of his car. Three persons were treated at Methodist Hospital early tqday for .minor injuries received when their car plunged into a ditch in the 5600 block on W. Washington St. They are George Lance, 19. of 357 N. Addison St. the driver; Miss Mary Irvin. 17, of 1720 W. Washington St.. and Miss Evelyn Barker, 19, | of 55 N. Holmes Ave. John Dugan, 19. of 351 N. Addison St. a fourth occupant of the car, was uninjured. Bicycle Struck
Robert Bayliss, 19. of 46 Johnson Ave. and Robert | Burgess, 15. of 133 Downey Ave. were cut and bruised | when their bicycle was struck by an automobile at 38th St. and|Keyston= Ave. Armond Hockman, 21: of 2725 Wood St., told police he swerved his car to pass a motorcycle and struck a pile of cement sand hags. His car then struck the cyclists and careened into a yard at 3741 N. Keystone Ave., he said. Marshall Mason, 22. of Plainfield, was reported in a serious condition in City Hospital as the result of head injuries received in an auto accident at New York and La Salle Sts. today. Mason was riding in a car driven north across New York St. on La | Salle St. by Burrel Shrake, 23, of Plainfield. The car was struck by one driven by Harold Thomas, 35, of R. R. 11, Box 417, and spun into a bus which was standing at the curb. Mason was the only person hurt.
|
PLANS OCEAN By United Press ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y.,, May 7—Dick Merrill, transatlantic flyer, announced today that he expected to take off from Floyd Bennett Field tomorrow for . London 2nd make the return trip across the Atlantic with pictures of the coronation. He said Jack Lambie would accompany him .as copilot.
PIG IS TOWN PROBLEM By United Press TOPSFIELD, Mass, May T.— Topsfield has a problem pig. A 200pound pig was captured by ‘a patrolman and now the town accountant and treasurer are wondering how the budget can be
FLIGHT
Six Indianapolis students received awards and honors at the 14th annual Butler University honor day held in the Fieldhouse this morning.
Vance Trent,
They are:
'1. Louise Rhodehammel, 4. Harold Howenstine, : | Craigle and Frederick D. Kershner Jr.
2. James : Moore, 3. Mary 5. Anna Lee
3 Counterfeit Suspects Held With Chemicals and $2000 Snead
PULASKI COUNTY’S PROSECUTOR DEAD
| ROCHESTER. May 7.—Jay Nye, 58, Pulaski County prosecuting at-
Three men suspected of counterfeiting activities here were arrested | |torney and veteran Winamac law-
| today on vagrancy charges and held
under $5000 bonds. They are to be |
turned over to Federal authorities for investigation. Police said they found in the car they were driving more than $2000
in paper money which had been moistened with chemicals.
They said
they also confiscated a quantity of lysol, potassium hydroxide and a roil
of onion-skin paper. @ | ing and asked him to drive them to
They were arrested by three police squads at Commerce and Brookside | Aves. A 47-year-old man, who
| gave his address as the 500 block of | |
W. Merrill St. was driving, accord- | ing to officers. With him were two |
men who said their homes were Detroit, Mich., and Canton, O. One of them said he was a Canton | contractor. A The Detroit man said,’ he had planned to return fo Rou-/
mania to visit his wife and children
and his Canton companion was to accompany him, They said they had been staying | in a rooming house in the 700 block of S. Illinois St. Police said they questioned Mayer Mitchell, the pro- | priétor, who told them that they | had rented a room on April 25 and | stayed until May 2. They returned at 11 p. m. last | night, police said Mr. Mayer told | them, He said they had acted | suspiciously. A N. Gladstone Ave. resident told | |
| officers, they said, that the suspects |
came to his house early this morn-
| of Ruth Baumgardner, haired Ohio Wesleyan University senior who has been missing since ! Tuesday night, asked. authorities to extend their search for her to near-
the city limits in the direction of t Anderson. He said he told them | his car wasn't in shape and sug- | gested they take a taxi, They replied that they couldn't | take a taxi because it would attract too much attention and then of-
fered to pay him ‘any price” to ac- |
comodate them, Mayer nid
'WIDEN SEARCH FOR MISSING OHIO $020,
By United Press DELAWARE, O., May 7.—Parents 21,
by cities today. Mr.
tified of the coed’s disappearance,
one month before she would have |
been graduated.
Veal Sale
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Pork Bargains Pig Hams, 20c| Fresh Pig Loins, 21¢c Picnic Pig Shidrs. 18¢c 15¢
Pure Lard. eee 25¢
Lamb Stew ........... 10¢ Shoulder
- Pork
Hilgemeier’s SMCKED PICNICS
5 to 7-Lb. Avge. Sugar Cured
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and Mrs. Carl Baumgardner | of Lakewood came here to aid” in | | the search as soon as they were no- |
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| ver, died today in Woodlawn hospi[tal here following a major . opera- | tion, | He was elected Republican prose-
cutor in 1934 and was re-elected in|
| 1936. From 1912-16 he served as | Winamac clerk-treasurer. | The wife and three daughters, . Mrs. Lucille Zellers, Winamac; Mrs. | Carolyn Kreck, South Bend, and Miss Harriet Nye, Winamac, survive, Funeral services and burial are to
i
be in Winamae Sunday,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Local Students Receive Awards
POLITE THIEVES TAKE AUTO, BUT LEAVE ANOTHER
Salesmen See Theft but Think Men Were on Demonstration.
Two men who stole an auto but left its owner a “trade-in” were sought by police today. Employees of the Moyer Auto Sales Co., 1302 N. Meridian St., told officers that the men stopped their car in front of the used car lot, got out, climbed into another car. and drove away. They said they did not report the incident at once because they thought it was a customer taking a car‘out on demonstration. Two youths, one 17 and the other 18, were arrested last night for questioning in connection with an attempted burglary at the Holliday Machine Shop, 515 E. 42d St., yesterday. They were caught by police, who said they chased their car for several blocks. Mrs. Dorothy Prevetere, 32, of 2122 Pleasant St., reported to police last night that a Negro prowler she 1 found in the rear yard of her home ordered her to accompany him at the point of a gun.
She said she begged for permission to go into the house to get her coat and then called her husband. The man had fled when the husband went out to investigate, police were told. James Foley, 20, of 901 E. Market St., was to face a charge of assault and battery with intent te kill in Municipal Court today. He was arrested last night after he was alleged to have struck his father, James Foley, 85, of the same address, with a cane. Mr. Foley was treated at City Hospital for head jinjuries,
ILLNESS DELAYS
By United Press DETROIT, May 7.—Postponement of the trial of Mrs. Hallie M. Cullinan's $100,(00 heart balm suit against Laura Strittmatter, attractive stenographer, for the second time was announced today by Judge John V. Brennan, The trial was recessed yesterday after Miss Strittmatter collapsed in the Judge's chamber. The defendant| was unable to appear in court this morning.
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Charges her husband was kept a virtual prisoner on an island by Laura Strittmatter, top photo, were “made in Detroit court by Mrs. Charles H. Cullinan, lower photo. Her $100,000 alienation of affections suit was the last to
be tried in Michigan after re- :
cent laws barring them. Miss Stritter said she obtained an annulment of her marriage to Cul-
linan when she learned he had not obtained a divorce.
SPANISH CLUB TO MEET
The Indiana Friends of Spanish Democracy are to meet and dance at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Amalgamated Hall, 168 W. 9th St. Rabbi Elias Charry, Roland Allen and Dr. Agapito Rey are to speak and a moving picture, “Spain in Flames” is to be shown.
MINTON URGES WORKING TRIAL FOR LABOR LAW
Turns Deaf Ear t Ear to Plea for Changes Until It’s Given Test.
Times Speciat
WASHINGTON, May 7.—Senator
Minton said today he would support no changes in the Wagner Act “until the present law has had time to work.) . Since the Supreme Court upheld
the law, which provides for majority:
rule in collective bargaining through the National Labor Relations Board, changes have been proposed by the United States Chamber of Commerce and other employer groups. . Organized labor has been equally as insistent on keeping the law unchanged. The senator's mail has
FRIDAY, MAY T. To \
4 brought “many letters’ from\ Ine diana from both sides, he said. “We should find out whether or not the law is going to work and if not, then amend it to make it work as Senator Wagner (D. N. Y.), intended it should,” Senator Min ton said. WPA Cuts Protested
Answering numerous letters of protest against paring down Works Progress Administration relief rolls, Senator Minton ‘insists that ade quate relief funds should be provided. A WPA delegation at Oakland City wrote to point out that living costs have increased 20 per cent, no private jobs are available and yet cuts are being made. “For humanity's sake, we ask you to prevent all reductions in relief rolls of the unemployed on WPA projects,” the letter .closed. In reply, Senator Minton wrote: “I have always favored adequate appropriations for relief purposes. I do not believe that the people in this country want any reduction in the expenditures for relief . if it will have to be taken out of the hides of those unfortunate citizens who, through no fault of their own, are on relief. “You can rest assured that -I shall look upon this legislation from a very 'mpathetic standpoint when it is pr esented to the Senate.”
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