Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1938 — Page 2

MANTA Y

PAGE 2

TTIATIY me

Aa.

12 ARE DEAD IN STATE MISHAPS OVER WEEK-END

Six Lose Lives in Traffic: Others by Drowning, Electrocution.

{Continued from Page One)

left side of the said. His auto overtimes. I'he other occupants of the car ere James Hardy; 32, of 2713 Plac Mrs. Catherine 23 of 1902 Boulevard Mrs. Ella Gibson, 30, address All received cuts bruises. Escapes Serious Injury

Occupant

g on the deputies

turned four

hland

ana

8 of th e nt het Huber, 41; Mrs , 42; Vera Huber, 17; Charles ber Jr, 15, and Harold Huber, None were seriously injured. both cars were City Hospital ie Lyons, 56, of 438 W s injured seriously when hich she was riding another car at 38th rd Place. She was Hospital. s. 60, of 706 W. 43rd the other car, was I to stop at a

car were Willard

upants of

thodist

ired, one n their auto went out Fall Ci eek Blvd. and Drive and hit a tree in, 17, of 1519 W. New ffered a possible fracart, 17, of 252 Koehne St river, and two other youths ived head cuts and body bruises They were taken to City Hospital

Eight Hoosiers Die in Week-End Mishaps

By United Press Eight persons violen Indiana, outside of Marion three in elec-

met death over the week-end, t

two by

and three by drowning

Kokomo, killed in chell 50, Bono, r Paoli 45 Indianapolis y high tension wire en knocked to the near Franklin Franklin deputy oct ed by tl

killed

1e high

AR ConnersBrookvill drowned

Plead for Fireworks Ban

Mary Anna Taylor and her father

» »”

One Fourth of July Brings Seven Months’

(eainged from Page One)

Was “carried from her hospital cot and taken home to bed, one leg nearly en back at the Knee. Physicians tried to put weights on the leg to develop the muscle and normal again, but the weight inflicted pressure sores and had to be abandoned. Every time you are near her one physician told Mr. Taylor,” take her foot and pull on that leg the only chance.” ery time he was near, Mr that, in spite of the of pain That continued more months, and ttle, she began 1 see,” her father said, even limp. Weren't

Tp 1 ma 1

hed

“she we

Father returned

had just 259 leeds

and daughter to their home,

i St., from an all day trip on a truck

1. Killed When ind Pennsylvani near Win ‘hest 1 Dies Guarding Wire

sre searching for an un-

rching 10 CI rashed his car sole near Franklin ged wire and n, guarding ed when he » while waving a red ing car. from a car to offer and touched the wire hefore he could

n approach

automobile erashe the rear of a car driven Vernon Magner of Paoli during a Fon zo Miller, 19, driv

t machine, was held for

rainstorm

Fishing From Boat Mr. Kennedy and a companion George Foster, were fishing from a boat in the Whitewater River, Mt Kennedy fell from the craft. lost grip on it the st

edge and sank beneath Foster was tossed into the water but swam The body has not been rec ecovered Searchers were di: for M1 Feast's while swimmi n drowned afte: h he was fishing capsizec The body was recovered

irface

“0 shore

drowned Mr. Austi

from whi

Petting Motorists To Get Stickers

Motorists who park

petting

in city parks parties are now lice reported to-

to have

> violators, po

1 the past

to break

They

police have been unup park petting in told petters to move the petters moved—a few rther down the road. -affic Captain Lewis Johnrders to motorcycle ) start giving out sti ickers.

CU RIOSITY G SETS HER £100 OAKLAND, Cal.. June 27 (U, P) Mrs I Rothwell climbed ich a patch of weeds to read It said: "Beware Poison She sued the park managefor $1000 and was awarded ) for medical services SIX DRIFT TO CATARACT RAND CANYON, Ariz, June 27 (U. P).—The two women and four men who are daring the turbulent Colorado River rapids through the Grand Canvon were believed today

drifting toward Cataract

ing beyond which there is no

reach Lee's Ferry.

LOANS

ON EVERYTHING Autos ° Clothing Jewelry ° Watches “Typewriters - Diamonds _° Shotguns

W111i

fo be Canvon

cscape until they

wo vears,” Mr idied about how to get a parents We do feel the outcome of Marty but it need not

For I have st 1es8age to ahout a's accident, ve happened myself. I had never allowed Mary Anna to set off fireworks, but every year I had bought them and set them off for her. This time, when she was hurt, work. We were supposed to have had the fireworks later. But Mary Anna couldn't wait “But, you see, I am to blame because, by setting them off for her, I really showed her how it was made it possible for her ourned by having them the house at all. Urges City Ban do hope the antifireworks ordiwill be passed. If I knew a to get acquainted with some C0 I would talk to

ROBBER LOOTS CACHE

A thief who

owne:

neilmen

was “locked in” closed up shop Friday : $50 from the Stahr taurant, 127 8S. Illinois St., Joseph proprietor, reported to police 1 ns money was taken from a ling place behind the counter, he I'he theft was discovered when store was opened today.

when

stole

CRASH KILLS NEGRO POET WISCASSET., Me... June 27 (U. ).—Blinding rain was blamed toa grade crossing crash in James Weldon Johnson, 87, oet-author, was Killed and seriously injured yesterday.

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Round Trip

DAVY FY RAILROAD SYSTEM

then, | to walk. |

Taylor said. |

I was at |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Roosevelt Signs Wage-Hour and Food Bills; Pays Tribute to Swedes and Finns in America

'PWA Approves Grant for

New Dormitory at Purdue:

(Continued from Page One)

icance of “three nations.

ship under which we have lived from the earliest times unmarred by any rift, unbroken by any misunderstanding. You are thrice welcome to our shores.”

Mr. Roosevelt said one of his ancestors, William Beekman, served as vice director of New Sweden from 1658 to 1663, and another ancestor, Martin Hoffman, had been an early

Swedish settler of New Amsterdam. |

Mr. Roosevelt recalled that]

| Sweden had been the first neutral

| European nation

to negotiate =a

| treaty of friendship with the United | States after the American revolu-

i tion, | cial delegates of Finland, he praised | | the part

Speaking directly to the offi-

Finns have played in “American civilization.” At the time the colonists arrived

| Finland was a province of Sweden.

| The colonists included many Finns. |

Purdue Gets PWA

Dormitory Grant

WASHINGTON, June 27 (U.

| today approved a series of new proj-

Times Photo.

Cracker Torture

them, and show them Mary Anna's scars, and tell them about how we all suffered for so long over her accident.” He paused a minute, and looked at Mary Anna, now 12 |

“We don't have any fireworks any

mote, do we?” Mary Anna shook her head. “For weeks,” he continued, “with all the best doctors there was nothing vou could do for her, except mavbe give her a drink of water, And the doctors couldn't tell whether she'd live or not, “For one little firecracker!”

ects and brought the total alloca-

| tions under the new recovery pro-

gram to $568,660,728,

Today's allocations projects on which applications had

been filed by communities since the |

signing of the huge spending-lend-

ing measure by President Roosevelt. |

PWA also announced approval of

|376 Federal projects requiring $46, | 602,021 in allotments to five Govern-

| ment agencies. Allocation of Federal funds rose to 340 million dollars.

MR. COMMIS SAYS: Biggest bargains we' ve ever offered! Steam-oil Permanent i : Saliniete

Al s 0 Pre-heat waves, No wires, no electricity, We specialize on ladies’ hair cuts.

SMILE Beauty Shop 622 Mass. Ave.

IT'S COOL HERE L1-0078,

I welcome | you, for you represent a true friend- |

PD. | — The Public Works Administration |

included 21 |

Included on!

the list of new grants was one of | $166,320 for a new women's dormi- | tory at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. Included in the $14,000,000 Department of Justice grant Saturday for penal institutions was a $3,000,000 Indiana allotment for a Federal “model penitentiary without walls.” Joseph Sanford, representative of the U, S. Board of Prisons, is in Southern Indiana conferring with civic leaders in an effort to select a site for the institution. Cities being considered are Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Evansville, Vincennes and Princeton.

‘Alfalfa Bill’ Gives Voters a Chance By WALKER STONE Times Special Writer OKLAHOMA CITY, June 27.— Four years ago, under the spell of | “Roosevelt - and - Recovery,” Oklahoma’s voters repudicated their Governor William H. Murray and | all of his works. They drove the | Murray crowd from the State House, | defeated the man Mr, Murray had picked to succeed him, and over-

whelmingly elected a whose campaign slogan was the New Deal! to Oklahoma.” Today “Alfalfa Bill,” ever, is again on the hustings. In the manner of a gruff old pedagog, he goes about scolding the voters

for the mess the state has got into. !

With the air of a patriotic martyr | he offers to leave the retirement to | | which his 68 years entitle him and

“Bring |

crankier than

take up once more the task of governing the state. To the voters he says: “If you don’t elect me, I'll feel sorry for you.” But with knows Bill Murray doesn't let the voters

the skill of one who | the bandwagon technique, | norship include Jack Walton, who

ministrator of WPA. He is depend- | ing on the machine support of WPA's 3300 salaried employees, who supervise the employment of some 60,000 relief workers.

Other candidates for the gover-

once held the office and was im-

think there is any doubt in his mind | peached, and Ira Finley, bidder for

| that they will see the light.

Belittles His Opponents

“I'm not at my best in this campaign,” he says. {when I have no opposition. True, | I have several adversaries—but | they're not opponents. running against each other to we! who wins second place.” Mr. Murray's principal primary opponents are, in the order of their present standing:

Leon ©. Phillips, small-town law- | to improve today, to the surprise of

ver, former speaker of the State Legislature, arch foe of Oklahoma's present “New Deal” Governor, E. W, Marland, and a middle-of-the-road Democrat who draws support both from conservative businessmen and union labor workers.

William S. Key, National Guard |

brigadier general, former state ad-

‘ZEAL OF TREASURE

candidate |

|

They're just |

|

HUNTER BRINGS FINE | SI.

OAKLAND Cal, June 27 (U. P.). -—Digging for pirate gold still has

lits lure for some. William Ryan, 39,

and Peter Sanelo, 37, were sentenced

to 10 days in jail for. tearing up a |

long stretch of sidewalk in order to |dig for rumored hidden treasure be-

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You’ll find the trolleys and buses the most healthful (i. e., nerve saving), economical and convenient form of transportation.

the radical fringe of the farmer | and labor groups.

“I always get lazy 15-YEAR-OLD BOY'S

LUNG SLICED BY SAW

PINE BLUFF, Ark, June 27 (U. | P.) —Fifteen-year-old Buddy Mid- | dlebrooks, his right lung almost cut | in two by a circular saw, continued

his physicians, When he was brought to a hos- | pital here doctors expected him to

die within a few minutes. Instead he gained consciousness and today was improving. Attendants attributed the improvement to the boy's strong constitution. The accident occurred Wednesday

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