Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1938 — Page 5
FRIDAY, JULY g& 1938
53 ARRESTED AS SIX ARE HURT IN| LOCAL TRAFFIC
25 Motorists Fined $97 With | Costs of $226 Suspended In Municipal Court.
(Editorial, Page 14)
As six persons were injured in overnight traffic accidents, police arrested 63 drivers on traffic violation charges, 12 of them for speeding. They sought two hit-and-run drivers Twenty-five motorists who appeared in Municipal Court today were fined a total of $97 while an additional $226 in costs was suspended Judge Pro Tem
eight
Edwin K. Steers ed 14 drivers $34 and suspended | 6. Judge John L. McNelis levied $63 in fines, suspending $110 against 11 defendants Howard L. Gibbs, 648 E. 21st St was fined $20 on a charge of ariving and $11 on a drunkenness charge. Judge McNelis laced Gibbs on probation for six months pending payment of the fine and also suspended a 30-day jail sentence on the drunkenness count. | Judgment was withheld on charges of reckless driving and failure to! have a driver's license. The judge recomended the State deny Gibbs a driver's license for one year. Kate Delane McLaughan, 60, of 6049 E. Washington St, was in Aa | critical condition today at City} Hospital after she had been struck by a trackless trolley at Pennsyl- | vania and Washington Sts. last | night. Ben Davidson, operator of he trolley, told police he was makg the turn into Washington St he woman stepped in front of car. Hospital! physicians said she received severe head injuries.
1D 11
Officer Recovering
Motorevele Officer Thomas Smith was injured when his motor~ollided with a truck as he was a Speeder, was recovering t the City Hospital. Officer was bruised on the chest ick driven bv Maurice 127 S. State St.. in front of him at tate Sts Police Thompson on a charge to give a hand signal and | to have a driver's license. waiting to cross a partly bridge was ztruck from and into another passengers Little Eagle Mrs. Goldie rrenc and Mary Torrence, were treated for cuts and bruises the Methodist Hospital
Ten 1¢ \ 11d
Thompson 22 of
rammed women ind red at
nd 10th St
a ried
two
Tre 2" £ 3
Torrence 313 N. Oxford r, told deputy sheriffs aiting in a line of one-way the bridge when his car v that of J. P. Greer, 23, and jammed the
121 1313
t Greer told deputies 10t see the Torrence car until to stop.
Seek Hit-Run Drivers
slice today were searching for . 1 hit-and-run drivers after ar-| sting one during the night. Elmer | n, 31, of 1740 W. Morris, was | on a charge of reckless | and failing to stop followccident after he had struck car of Mrs, Walter Jar801 River Ave, police
i-run driver struck nd a bicycie at tts Ave. and another car of Harvey Wyant n Ave
JUDGE IS STUDYING STEPHENSON'S PLEA
NOBLESVILLE, July 8 (U. P).— | ‘ircuit Judge Cassius M. Gentry | yday had taken under advisement. | motion by the State for dismissal
L
{ a petition for a new trial for D. Stephenson, former grand dragon it diana Ku-Klux Klan, who a life sentence for the f Madge Oberholzer i Gentry instructed Mavor | mith of La Porte, attornev | Assistant At- | K. Northam
and James its by July 18. The court in- | t hoped to make a decision | d of the July term atiorney contended tify at his trial 13 to fear of “bodily | veiled threats” and | was entitled to a new
DEMAND CHECK OF PASTOR-CANDIDATE
IN'OPEKA, Kas. July 8 (U. P.).— demand that the Dies Congresitlee on un-American | ctivities investigate the record of the v. Gerald B. Winrod, Fundmentalist minister who is seeking 1 Senatorial nomina- | \ a » Was made today by e oup of religious and educational leaders ! We appeal to the Dies committee | to investigate Mr. Winrod, his rec- | ord, the sources of his lavish ex- | wditures and his Fascist connec | s the group said in a joint! tatement. “The Swastika must | fiy over Kansas.” |
CLOTHING ON BRIDGE | GIVES SUICIDE HINT
WASHINGTON, Ind, Julv 8 (U P.) —Clothing belonging to Harlev V. English of Vincennes was found | today on the Maysville bridge over | the White River near here with two | notes attached which authorities | said indicated he committed suicide. | The Sheriff's office, however. is checking with Vincennes police to learn if English might have prepeed a hoax or whether he actually committed suicide. The body has not been found.
for FINER LINENS at Lower Prices
SALES GO UP ALONG WITH TEMPERATURE . . .
A |
* 3
Lemonade for sale! Lemonade
Left to right, Gene Steinhilber, 3633 Guilford Ave. and Marjorie Stewart, Lots of those sales are made these days, as the heat
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of, § R0¢ '
/ AR
for sale!
3620 Guilford Ave.
Bee Prosperi ty Causes as Much
————————_
35358 Guilford Ave., have
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Worry as Famine; 2
PAGE 5
ONE-GIRL ICE CREAM
This is a one-girl ice cream social, namely
Hart.
That multiple cone is her idea of keeping cool.
SOCIAL . . . . . . PLANE CRASH KILLS WOMAN PASSENGER
‘Transport Demolished Near
Times Photos 5-year-old Ann Carolyn Her mother,
Mrs. Paul J. Hart, 231 E. 11th St, explained that Ann Carolyn ate the
ice cream in “chapters.”
{
Honey Business Turns Out More Grim Than Sweet
By JOE COLLIER Indiana bee economy has gone in for a boom this summer after a depression last summer which resulted in a famine last winter, followed by malcontent swarmings this spring. It's all tied in with the number of clover blossoms, the amount of rainfall, the number of hours of sunshine, the strength of the bees, the number of hives and, some of the more perplexed say, the lack of bee skvscrapers The situation is so intense that James E. (as in emergency) Starkey Indiana State Beeckeepers' Association secretary, was unable to report at this time on the summer field meet at Hope—the town, not the future tense mental condition. The most unusual development
The
NOTE DROP IN SALE
OF LICENSE PLATES
Rodenbeck Sees Increase in Drivers’ Certificates.
A reduction in the sale of auto license plates and an increase in the sale of drivers’ licenses as compared
with corresponding figures of last
| year were reported today by Mark | Rodenbeck, assistant State Auto Li-
cense Bureau commissioner, A total of 910,259 license plates
| from the standpoint of people who,
have trained themselves in self-
control is that there's not enough honey and too much room in their homes, and also swarm when there's too much honey and not enough room in their homes This makes them among the haughtiest tenants on record and should serve to impair their popularity somewhat Mr. Starkey said that one of the wavs to keep down a bee uprising is to give them more room and more hives to fill. This keeps their minds off political and social unrest and thwarts trouble However, some beekeepers haven't the extra quarters to be stored with honey. Some beekeepers who have
have been sold by the Department to July 1, a decrease of 29.031. Drivers’ license sales total 1,154.478. an increase of 24731 over last vear. Mr. Rodenbeck explained that new state laws were responsible for the increased sale of drivers licenses. These laws give officials a more complete check on motor car operators
APPEAL SEEN FOR KIDNAPER M'CALL
JASPER, Fla, July 8 (U. P.).— A new effort to save Franklin Pierce McCall, 2!-year-old Kkidnaper of Jimmy Cash Jr., from death in the electric chair, was planned today
| by C. A. Avriett, attorney for Mec-
Call's family.
bees swarm when!
gone in for a bee building boom, have raised bee skyscrapers which |
are seven and eight sections high. Some of those, even, are reported filled. Some owners hold out for putting the new section on top of the stack, and thus avoiding the heavy lifting. Others hold out for tearing the whole stack down and putting the empty section, and therefore the lightest, on the bottom and the full sections. and therefore the heaviest, on the top That's a technical problem which will have to be solved by a staff engineer. Other problems involve the bee personnel itself, which makes them more and more technical and in some instances calls for drastic dis-
| ciplinary action.
SCHENCK PRAISES AGRICULTURE ACT
Laws Seek Parity in Prices, He Tells Farmers.
HUNTINGTON. July 8 (U. P).— Hassil E. Schenck, Indiana Farm Bureau president, today was on record favoring the Agricultural Adjustment Act.
Addressing the annual picnic of | the Huntington County Farm Bu- |
reau yesterday, Mr. Schenck said: ! “When a farmer is licked he has
! conservation of
normal granary principle.”
Mr. Starkey says, for instance: “When swarming conditions have passed your control what would you | do? Have you ever tried putting two to five swarms into one? “There are several ways of doing this. One is to smoke the newly hived swarms severely, then dump | the extra swarm down in front. As they march in, if you see the extra Queen, kill her.”
Another way he advocated involved a good deal of by-play and ended up with: “Of course, the extra queens will have to be killed. The bees will attend to that. An ounce of prevention in the first place is worth a pound of cure.” It's a very grim business, replete |
with intrigue for which everv bee-
{ keeper should have a staff Borgia. |
no reason to blame it on AAA leg- | islation. “The 1938 AAA has as its specific aim the effecting of parity prices for farm-produced commodities. It provides for a start on crop insurance, establishment of research laboratories to develop new commer-
cial uses for agricultural products, | the soil and the | feature, the ever-
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COAST GUARD FINDS MISSING EXPEDITION
EL PASO, Tex, July 8 (U. P.).— Two members of the U. S. Coast Guard, who set out in a plane to search for a missing party of scien-
| tific adventurers on the Colorado
River near Lee's Ferry, Ariz, reported to their commander today that they had communicated with the group and that all were safe.
They dropped messages which re- | quested the party to answer with |
signals. The first message said: are the scientific party from please.” The six persons on ground lay down.
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| Billings, Mont.
BILLINGS, Mont., July 8 (U.P).
| —A woman passenger was killed land two other passengers were in- | jJured early today when an eastbound Northwest Airlines transport plane crashed three minutes after taking off from the Billings Airport, The dead woman was Mrs. N. S. Mackie, Evanston, Ill. She died an | hour and a half after the crash of a head injury suffered when thrown | clear of Lhe plane and onto a rock | The injured were N. S. Mackie, { husband of the dead woman, dis- | located shoulder, bruises and shock. | Mrs. W., J. Timdale, Slocum, Brit{ish Columbia, minor head injury and bruises. The pilot, co-pilot and five other | passengers were unhurt. One of the | five was A. L. Neimeyer, Commerce | Department representative, who | grounded rll zephyr type transports | following investigation of a crash | fatal to 10 on Jan. 10 near Bridger, | Mont, The grounding order
was lifted
recently and the line resumed their use. During the period of suspene sion, the airline used planes with which it had gone 11 years without a crash.
Frank Simms, Manager of the South Side Furn. Co., says:
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