Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1938 — Page 3
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1938
' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
wa
By
PAGE 3
FRENCH AND BRITISH DISCUSS HITLER'S PLAN FOR CZECHS
KING IS FETED; AID OF HENLEIN
SEEKS PARLEY
THE FOREIGN SITUATION
PARIS—King and Queen honored by Paris municipality. PRAHA—Sudeten demands are misunderstood, leader says. MADRID — U. 8S. Embassy bombed by Rebels. HENDAYE — Spanish Loyalist defense lines intact, TOKYO—Japan seeks conference with Russia. SHANGHAI — Chinese repulse Japs on Yangtze. BUENOS AIRES—Chaco treaty to be signed tomorrow.
French-British Talks Accompany Festivities
Police Disperse Chicago Pickets With Tear Gas
RR
(Editorial, Page 12)
PARIS, July 20 (U. P.)—Fuehrer | Adolf Hitler's proposed solution for | a settlement of the Czechoslovak | problem in the interests of Euro- | pean peace was transmitted by Britain to France today in the midst | of an enthusiastic welcome for King George and Queen Elizabeth on their state visit,
Diplomats of France and Britain | engaged in extended talks to cement the political understanding between | the two countries. Secrecy sur- | rounded the nature of Herr Hitler's | proposal but Czech circles said Hit- | ler suggested Sudeten German autonomy in Czechoslovakia. with Czech neutrality guaranteed by the powers, They said Praha previously re- | fused the proposal because it would oblige Czechoslovakia to abandon her definite military alliances with France and Russia in favor of a less secure general guaranty. | The French and Russians opposed | the suggestion previously because it would deprive their military alliance of a middle ground meeting place in Czechoslovakia. Premier Edouard Daladier, Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet and Viscount Halifax, British Foreign Secretary, opened preliminary conversations with experts. No rormal communique was issued but British sources reported that Lord Halifax conveved Adolf Hitler’s assurances that Germany wants | improved relations with Britain and indirectly with France, as communicated to the Loncon Foreign Office by Capt. Fritz Weidemann, Herr Hitler's personal adjutant. i Half a million persons lined the | Champs Elysees this morning when the King drove by on the way to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier where he placed a wreath, and their cheers were matched by those of hundreds of thousands more when the royal couple, accompanied by President Albert Lebrun, went to the Hotel de Ville—the city hall—to receive the city’s official welcome. King George, in the full-dress | uniform of Field Marshal of the British Army, escorted by a mount- | ed detachment of Republican Guards, drove through a veritable hedge of French regulars to put | his wreath on the tomb of the unknown soldier. Queen Elizabeth was dressed in | a long white lace frock with a hip length white lace coat. She carried a fox fur on her arm. She wore a white straw hat trimmed with white feathers. The King and Queen returned at 12:30 a. m. from the brilliant dinner and reception given them by President Lebrun at his Elysee Palace last night to mark the first day of their four-day state visit, Despite their late night the King and Queen telephoned to London
Police fire tear gas guns as more than 200 police and deputies rout
500 C. I. O. pickets in
25-minute battle at the Chicago Hardware
§
Foundry plant in North Chicago.
the rest driven away as the plant reopened.
ou
{ E |
Times-Acme Photos.
About 50 pickets were arrested and
at 8 a. m. to talk to their little
| daughters, Princesses Elizabeth and | Margaret Rose.
Henlein Lieutenant Rejects Cabinet's Plea
(Copnvright, 1938. by United Press) PRAHA, July 20.—Karl H. Frank, parliamentary leader of the Sude-
ten German Party, demanded today that the Czechoslovak Government at once start direct negotiations for solution of the minorities problem. Implicitly rejecting, in advance of its publication, the minorities statute which the Government has drafted, Herr Frank said that it met less than 5 per cent of the German minority’s demands. He expressed suspicion that the Government coalition parties intended to force the statute on the German minority and commented
that any effort to do so would cause ! {a “dangerous” situation.
Herr Frank, right hand man of
Konrad Henlein, the supreme Ger- |
man minority leader, and the parliamentary chieftain of the minority party, made a strong plea for recognition of the rightness of the Sudeten German demands
“Our autonomy demands are mis- |
understood abroad,” Herr Frank said. “For example, the autonomy of a Britishh Dominion like Canada
] | a visit to the Emperor, called a general conference of high Army officers tonight to discuss the Man- | chukuo border tension between Japan and Russia. The border correspondent of the Tokyo Nichi Nichi said the Soviets
{are transporting troops into Possiet |
Bay, near the disputed hill, which is | in the Vladivostok region on the Pacific. A Foreign Office spokesman said Japan is ready, if Russia agreed, to |
| the Loyalist commander-in-chief, threw 40,000 men into the breach.
Japanese Landing
Parties Repulsed (War Map, Page 11)
SHANGHAI, July 20 (U. P).— Chinese authorities reported today that their armies had repulsed several Japanese attempts to land troops on the banks of the Yangtze
make a joint study of the border disputes. Japan's attitude in the incident, the spokesman added, will depend on the Russian reply to a new protest made by the Japanese embassy at Moscow against the alleged invasion.
U. S. Embassy Bombed; Loyalist Lines Hold
BARCELONA, July 20 (U. P.).— | Dispatches from Madrid reported
today that the United States Em- |
bassy there was damaged severely last night during a Rebel artillery bombardment. It was the first time the Embassy had come under fire, Four shells struck the building. There were no casualties since the Embassy has been closed for a long time.
is far beyond anything we ask. ...|
We want a state of nationalities |
which belongs to all nationalities
| within the state. Non-Czech nation- | alities have a home here but they
can find no fatherland. Czechs
fore, is not purely a (Czech) national state. Other races thus have the right to demand a corresponding partnership and to ask for administration of their own local affairs for themselves and by themselves.” ’
Japanese Army
Officers Discuss Russia TOKYO, July 20
| form slightly more than 51 per cent | | of the population. This state, there- |
(U. P).—Gen.| . Seishiro Itagaki, War Minister, after | the Loyalists and Gen. Jose Mia ja
HENDAYE, French - Spanish
for a drive on Hankow, | Japanese columns have been stalled outside Kiukiang, 135 miles below Hankow, for the last week and commanders had attempted to land reinforcements from warships. | A Chinese communique asserted that 46 Japanese warships anchored [at Yangchiawan, at the neck of Poyang Lake, had been forced to retire by Chinese shore batteries. A few hours later the ships again ! attempted to land men but were again compelled to turn back. Japanese bombing planes con- | tinued widespread forays over the | district around Hankow, hoping to | break the Chinese lines and put | China's Air Force out of commission. In one raid on Kiukiang, it | was said, 300 bombs were dropped | near Chinese fortifications.
‘Accord Reached
In Chaco Dispute | BUENOS AIRES, July 20 (U. P).
| Frontier, July 20 (U. P.).—Spanish | —Delegates of six nations attend- | Loyalist authorities reported today | a Je ohare Pease Sonleverice _ . | agreed today to sign forma othat their lines defending Sagunto | a the treaty a end ae LE and Valencia were intact despite | tury-old dispute between Bolivia
incessant artillery and aerial bom- | and Paraguay over the boundary
| bardments. Valencia dispatches as- | serted that Gen. Francisco Franco's Italian vanguard struck south- | west from Ragudo Pass, north of Viver, in a violent thrust toward | Segorbe. | The Italians, under command of Gen. Garcia Valino, were stopped | when they reached Ragudo Pass, | the Loyalists reported, and attempted an encircling movement. The pass was heavily fortified by
’
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Here Is the Traffic Record! 5
64 Reckless Driving . 0
County Deaths | Speeding ....
(To Date)
ase
City Deaths (To Date)
| Running Prefer- | ential Streets 10 |
Running Red | Light 6 Drunken i Driving ....
Others ......
eh ¥ Accidents Injured Dead Arrests
. 36 13
|
luncheon, Columbia Club. |
MEETINGS TODAY
Kiwanis Club, oon | Management Division, Real |
Propert : Bo luncheon, Canary Cottage,
Estate Board, noon Lions Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, | hoon {
Beverage Credit Group. luncheon, Hotel | Antlers, noon { Young Men's Discussion Club, dinner, Y. M.C.A. 6p m Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Severin Hotel, noon. Twelfth District American eon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, of Trade, noon Loyal Order of Moose luncheon, Moose Hall. noo
Legion, lunch-
MEETINGS TOMORROW
Indianapolis Real Estate Board, golf tour- | nament and dinner, Club, afternoon and night. Advertising Club of Indianapolis, .uncheon, Canary Cottage, noon. American Business Club, luncheon, Colum- | bia Club, noon. Fine Paper Credit Group, Grille, the William H. Bl Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board noon. Acacia, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington, |
noon. . Sibi | Indiana Motor Traffic Association, lunch- | eon, Hotel Antlers. noo i Engineers Guild,
noon. | Trade, |
k Co. of
n. meeting, Hotel Antlers, 8 p. m. Oil Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin, noon. Construction League Indianapolis, luncheon. Architects and Builders building, noon. Indianapolis Camera Club, meeting, 110 E. oth St, 8 p. m.
MARRIAGE LICENSES |
(These lists are from official records in the County Court House. The Times, therefore. is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)
| | |
of
Harold J. Van Buskirk. Moe
Ind.; Ethel Lorraine Joslin, N. Illinois St. Ross McCoy. 31, garet Bale. 23. of 122 Vincent Francis Lo Duca, Roosevelt Ave: Junice G 2212 N. Keystone
Eaton, of 1220
anapolis: Mar- . Dearborn §t 23. of 3312 Crane, 20, of
8. Addison . of 279 N. Linn St of Oklahoma City;
of Indi 8 N
BIRTHS Boys Leonard. Evelyn Marcum. at Carl, Luvena Shidler, at City Adam, Mary Roman, at St. Vincent's Ralph, Hazel Butterworth, at St. Vinnt's.
City,
te
Luncheon Club, Charles, n. { Jo
| i
| mont
Hillcrest Country | niel
| m
Da boy and girl,
Ruckle,
coronary Grande, mitral insufficiency
noma
bama,
Max, Margaret Hadley, at St. Vincent's.)
Bernard, Viola O'Connor, at St. Vincent’s.
Stephen, Rosalyn Farrell, at St. Vinent's
Howard, Louise Swartz, at St. Vincent's, Julius, Bernita Hausz, at St. Francis. Lowell, Mary Rees, at Methodist. Paul, Elsa Tingle, at Methodist. Warren, Norma Gregory, at Methodist. Richard, Betty Tinnin, at 713 Locke. Imer, Lillian Roth, at 312 S§. Warman. William, Willie Jones, at 2123 W. Howard. Elijah, Cornelia Morrow, at 1656 Bellefontaine. Clinton, Marion Williams, at 435 W. 15th. James, Lillian Stone, at 2608 Boulevard. Frank. Alta Smith, at 801 Warren. . Edith Taylor, at 3817 Rader. a . Ruth Hertwick, at 1016 8S. Ranoiph William, Pauline Cox Everett, Sara Riches, Harry, Mary Cardinal, Tremont Roy. Margaret Kearns, at 818 Fletcher. Bennie, Amy Page. at 347 S. Walcott, Girls Kenneth, Clarisei Webb, at City. Grover, Anna Dinwiddie, at City Foster, Ada May Brannon, at City. Jack, Mildred Malone, at St. Vincent's.
1522 Sauley 1413 WwW. 323 N.
at at at
Omar, Genevieve Henderson, at 3t. Vin-
cent’s Lawrence, Gertrude Roesener, at St. Vinnt's. Bernard, Ruth Fisher, at St. Vincent's, Walter, June Groves, at Coleman. Orville, Ila Slv, at Coleman Wayne, Louise Pullen, at St. Francis.
ce
cis Orla, Verna Phillips, at Methodist. Cary. Lucille Brown, at 509 N. Cawractieus, Nichols,
Bennett,
1333 1325 hn, Dorothy Clark, at 1916 N. HardBE orrest. Thelma Griffi,
Clyde, Helen Pruitt, at 648 N. Luett Austin, Ruth Harlan, at 411 N. Centen-
Rosie at S.
luncheon, Board | Tremont.
Frank, Genevieve at
George, Florence Craig, at 1415 Lawn-
dale. i i FBugene, Samaria Schafer, at 1537 Hiatt. | ic
Richard. Mildred Krebs,
at 1245 Lee. Lewis,
Wanda McLaughlin, at 1136 N. Benjamin, Ruby Woods, at 515 E. NorAlfred, Lillian Green, 1045 S. TreHarold, Mary Smith. at 922 Warren. John, Edna Gaines, at 909 W. 27th.
Edward Marie Cole. at 543 Minerva Phyllis
luncheon, Men's | Tacoma oc wood
at
William, Manering, at 2
Brouse.
Twins
llas. Della Muman, at 2101 Langley,
DEATHS
David Johnson, 24, at Long brain tumor
Elena M. Shanklin, 47, at Central, sara.
| com
Charles F. Gullefer, 74, at Central, stom-
{ ach ulcers.
James E. Pischer, 63. at 18 E. 40th, car-
cinoma.
Sarah Frances Partlowe, angina pectoris.
George Holland, 79, at
76, at
3045 Kenwood
chronic mvocarditis
Richard A. Patrick, 58,
noma.
32nd. |
Claude, LaVerne Perkinson, at St. Fran- | Ss
Senate. |
934 |
3336 |
at
at City
Vin-
Catherwnod,
culosis. at 2057 CarrollMary Magdalene Thomas, skull. Mary Morris Williams, Nellie Hadley, 58, at 331 W. 16th Place, cerebral hemorrhage Rachel! I. Roller, 89, at 2301 E. Garfield | arteriosclerosis Susan Blacketer, at James H. Hall, 44. al Veterans’ sarcoma
Benjamin McQueen, 81, at City .tuberRalph W. Wishard. 66, fon, coronary thrombosis. 40, Methodist, acute heart dilatation. Minnie Blessing, 36, at City, fractured Thomas William Wimsott, 24, skull fracture. 46, at St. cent’'s, uremia chronic myocarditis. Elizabeth Franklin, 58, at 911 N. Senate, Samuel McGinnis, 85, at 2729 Winthrop, chronic nephritis. Drive cerebral hemorrhage. | Daniel Willis, 76, at 46 S. Donald James Swan, 82, at 1623 Ludlow, arteriosclerosis | A 71. Methodist, | chronic myocarditis. Harold Condon Hickman, 33, at 1612 Central, carcinoma,
OFFICIAL WEATHER
~ United States Weather Burean em
INDIANAPOLIS | cloudy and slightly cooler, unsettled tonicht and tomorrow.
] Sunrise ...... 4:33 | Sunset
TEMPERATURE —July 20, 1937—
at 632 E. Ver- |
| Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... | Total precipitation since Jan. 1 | Excess snice Jan. 1
MIDWEST WEATHER
| Indiana—Somewhat unsettled tonight { and Thursday; slightly cooler tonight ex1 cept in extreme southwest portion; cooler | tomorrow in south portion. Ilinois—Considerable cloudiness tonight and tomorrow; slightly cooler tonight in extreme south and extreme northwest portions; somewhat cooler tomorrow in extreme south portion,
Lower Michigan—Considerable cloudiness tonight and tomorrow; cooler in east and south portions tonight.
Ohio—Generally fair tonight and tomorrow preceded by scattered thundershowers in north portion this
tonight; slightly tonight and in south portion tomorrow.
and probably tomorrow; temperature. WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 3 AM.
Station, . ar . Amarillo, Tex. R002 Tels
little change in
Bismarck, N. D Boston
Chicago Cincinnati
| Cleveland
| Denver
at Long, carel- |
Felix Joseph Kreig, 69, at St. Vincent's. |
thrombosis Anna L. McClellan. 81. at 1616 E. LeMartha Teifert, 59, at 12 Schiller, carci-
Edna Kline, 43, at Methodist
Dodge" Citv Helena, Mont. Jacksonville, hah ansas Citv, Mo. Little Rock. Ark. Los Angeles
Ella M. Moore, 74, at 1540 College, cere- |
bral hemorrhage.
leukemia. N
Elizabeth A. Power, 76, at 2341 N. Ala- | 9
arteriosclerosis. Jennie M,
carcinoma.
Peter Jez. 77,
Eliza Niemann, 89, at 225 E. Morris.
carcinoma.
|
Woodall, 39, at 336 N. Miley. !
at 1029 N. Sharon, cardio | vascular renal disease.
|
San Antonio, Tex. San_ Francisco St. Louis
FORECAST — Partly | occasionally |
afternoon or early | cvoler in north portion |
Kentucky—Local thundershowers tonight |
| line in the Chaco jungle region.
Railroad No Place to Nap,
Frank Kramer, St. Louis, Mo., knows today that his inexperience either as a drinker or as a traveler led him pretty close to death.
The crew of an inbound freight | train saw him stretched across the
| tracks at the Pennsylvania crossing |
|on Delaware St. and stopped the | train within 25 feet of him with | emergency brakes. He told Judge Pro Tem. Joseph
| Wicker yesterday that he had sup-| posed he was bound for Elwood, Ind. |
where he said he had a job, but ad-
mitted that he had had a nip or |
{ two of bay rum.
| Judge Wicker suspended a finding | |of $1 and costs on condition that |
Kramer be on his way.
DAUGHTER OF ‘SHOVEL | KING’ WINS DIVORCE
|
| DETROIT, July 20 (U. P.).— Mrs. ' Cora Hubbard Williams, 35, daugh- | ter of John C. Hubbard, Pittsburgh “shovel king.” was granted an uncontested divorce in Circuit Court today. Mrs. Williams, whose father’s fortune has been estimated at $30.000,000, testified that her husband. John C. Williams, a former Naval officer, is confined to an institution for the insane. Custody of the Williams’ only child, 6-year-old Caro Maltz Williams, was given to the mother.
Wiliams struck his
committed to the asylum. Mrs.
future care of her husband. | | | “ez SMOKY MOUNTAINS
> Via Knoxville, Tenn. from Indianapolis One Week,.................350.15 Two Weeks..... 77.15 Above rates for one person to a room; two, three or four people to a room proportionally lower. Tickets good in AjrConditioned Coaches. Hotel Room with Bath at Gatlinburg. Tours including sightseeing trips in the Park and vicinity: —
WEEK END
AN fares quoted include rail fare in Coach to Cincinnati and return and all expénse beyond. Second group of fares include lower berth in Sleeper Cincinnati to Knoxville and return. Two in a $2.50 less each, one in an upper % $1.00 less. For full ini mation and booklet, ask T. CARPE} TER, Trav. Pass't Agt, 310 Merchants Bank Bldg., Phone Riley 1041—Indianapolis, Ind,
Louisville & Nashville R. R.
EI SR ERS.
Visitor Learns
72-year-old | father-in-law. He was arrested and |
Williams told the court that ar-| rangements had been made for the!
6 OF CLOUD KIN HELD ON BOND
| | | | |
Charges of Conspiracy at! South Bend Linked With | Financial Probe.
SOUTH BEND, July 20 (U. P.).— | Six members of the family of Otto | Cloud, former Macy, 1nd. banker | whose financial affairs are under | investigation, today were held under | $5000 bond each after their arrest | here last night on charges of con- | spiracy to commit a felony. Those taken into custody were | Richard Cloud, 29, of Rochester, and | Paul Cloud, 33, of Bourbon, sons of { the banker; the elder son's wife, { Mrs. Paul Cloud, 27; Mrs. Virginia | Erwin, 23, a daughter, and her hus- { band, W. Henry Erwin, 24, of Bour- ( bon, and Orvan Van Lue, 29, man- | ager of the Cloud Store at Roches-
ter. | The charges grew out of an investigation by the St. Joseph County Grand Jury, one of the three inquiries launched following the closing of the Citizens Bank at Macy, which Mr. Cloud formerly headed, for liquidation. Investigations by the Fulton County Grand Jury, the St. Joseph County Grand Jury and State Bank Examiners were started after the State Department of Financial Institutions filed notice in Miami Circuit Court June 30 of the closing and liquidation of the citizens Bank of Macy. The Fulton Grand Jury, which has been investigating operations there, was expected to make a report of its findings today. Also under investigation is the Cloud & Sons Electric Appliance firm which operates stores in | Rochester, Fulton and Bourbon. | The company now is in receiver- | ship. | The elder Mr. Cloud also is at | liberty under $5000 bond in a South | Bend ‘court on a charge of obtain-
| ing money under false pretenses, |
RUSH NORTH-SOUTH RAIL RATE HEARING
BUFFALO, N. Y,, July 20 (U. P)). —Night sessions tomorrow and Friday in an effort to complete the Interstate Commerce Commission hearing on North-South railroad
| freight rates appeared likely today as opposing attorneys took stock of | remaining evidence to be submitted | | by the North in rebuttal to South- | | ern demands.
was featured |
Yesterday's session
by the testimony of Governors Cross | of Connecticut and Aiken of Ver- | mont, who warned that the general | | level of wages will be reduced and | {the New England stone industry dealt a death blow if rail freight | rates are reduced for southern ship-
| pers.
TVA YARDSTICK RATES ‘GUESS,’ SAYS MORGAN
NATIONAL AFFAIRS KNOXVILLE—Dr. Morgan charges TVA waste. U, S. S. HOUSTON—President hopes for better fishing,
Millions Wasted, Claims
Deposed Chairman
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. July 20 (U, P.)—Dr. Arthur E. Morgan, deposed TV *. chairman, resumes testifying before a Congressional investigating committee today to amplify his charges that the other directors, had
wasted millions of dollars and had:
based the “yardstick” power rates upon a “guess.” The “guess,” he said, was Director David E. Lilienthal’s. “You were the chairman,” Senator Frazier (R. N. D.) interrupted Dr. Morgan. “Do you want us to understand that you accepted these rates, which are vital not only to TVA but to the whole country, without knowing how they were arrived
at?”
“I asked Mr. Lilienthal how they were arrived at and he said he would give me the report of the survey by the committee of experts,” Dr. Morgan replied. “He never did, but after a few months he said the City of Tupelo, Miss., was making money on the rates— that the rates were too high. I took his word for it, but after a while I began to have misgivings about it.”
Terms It “Lucky Guess”
Dr. Morgan had said that at a board meeting, Mr. Lilienthal had admitted that the rates had been a “lucky guess.” Dr. Morgan said that so far as he could learn, Mr. Lilienthal based the “yardstick” on the Tacoma, Wash., public power plant rates, He said this comparison was unsatisfactory to him, because the Tacoma plant had been in operation 40 years, had amortized its capital investments, and could base its rates mostly on operating costs, and that it paid lower wages and enjoyed a cheaper source of power than TVA. He said there had been dissention among him and the other two directors, Mr. Lilienthal and Dr. H. A. Morgan, since their first board meeting in 1933; that the other two overrode him and shared the authority between themselves. Dr. Morgan said that if the other directors had taken his advice, TVA could have saved two million dollars on its switchyards and transmission lines at Norris Dam. He said they wasted one million dollars on agricultural enterprises, including a project for freezing strawberries and transporting them by barge down the Tennessee River.
President Bound for
Socorro Island
ABOARD U. S. S,. HOUSTON, En Route to Cocos Isle, July 20— (By Naval Radio to the United Press).— President Roosevelt hoped that his fishing luck—usually good—would improve today. The naval cruiser Houston, carrying the Chief Executive and his fishing companions, was bound for Socorro Island, 250 miies south of the extreme southern tip of lower California.
ATTEMPT TO END
MESSENGER STRIKE
The State Labor Division today attempted to negotiate settlement of a strike of about 50 messenger boys employed by the Postal Telegraph Company's Indianapolis office. The strike was called yesterday by the Independent Telegraph Messenger’'s Union. Al Casse is acting as union negotiator and Arthur Davies, Chicago, is representing the company in conferences with Arthur Viat, Assistant State Labor Commissioner. James King, union secretary, said the messengers are asking for a wage increase and improved working conditions. Company representatives said the messenger boys are covered by a contract which the company signed recently with the Commercial Telegrapher's Union. The messengers were former members of the C. T. U., Mr, Casse said, but have withdrawn to form their own organization and the withdrawal has not been contested bythe C. T. 1, Harry C. Huggins, company local manager, declined to comment other than to say, “The strike is still on.”
|
| “Hits the Spot When It’s Hot!”
Boers Cold P late
Testimony revealed that last April |
for Luncheon!
fresh
every meal!
37
South Meridian
An ideal “snack” for a warm day—and then, too, here’s a great variety of vegetables — and you really should have at least one “hot” dish at
THE UNUSUAL CAFETERIA
usset
Boy, 4, Struck By Street Car; Police Hold 36
A 4-year-old boy was reported in critical condition at City Hospital today with injuries received when he was struck by a street car last night. He was the only person injured in six overnight accidents reported to police. John Bingham, 4, of 134 West 21st St. Annex, received a head injury
when he was struck by an inbound |
Shelby ‘street car, operated by William Archer, 48, of 3010 Graceland Ave., at Illinois St. and McLean Place. Five motorists were found guilty in Municipal Court of traffic viol.tions and were fined $10.
EVANSVILLE, July 20 (U. P).— Funeral arrangements were being completed today for Mrs. Anna MecCutchan, 51, of Elberfeld, who died at the Deaconess Hospital here last night from injuries suffered in an
automobile accident near here last !
Saturday.
PLYMOUTH, July 20 (U. P.).— Coroner L. W. Vore today filed a verdict of accidental death in the death of William O. Harness, 12, Grovertown. The boy was crushed between two automobiles June 24 when an automobile driven by W. J. Frazier, Ft. Wayne, skidded out
of control and crashed into a car |
standing at the Harness filling station at Grovertown.
Ruling Sought On Warrant at Gaming Trial
Trial of 13 men charged with gambling and visiting a gaming
CORRIGAN ASKS FUN, NOT MONEY AS OFFERS GROW
New York Plans Welcome; Fear Amateur Is Lost; Papana Crashes.
DUBLIN, July 20 (U. P.).—Doug= | las Corrigan took another look at his nine-year-old “crate” today and laughingly revealed that he had another possession which he treasured almost as much. It formerly was owned by another Douglas—Daugias Fairbanks, whose | feats in the movies thrilled the California “wrong direction” flier when he sold newspapers years ago on Los Angeles streets. It was a | dime—price of a newspaper plus a tip—which Mr. Fairbanks once gave Corrigan. The 31-year-old unemployed aire plane mechanic said he did not have much use for money, as offers poured in. i “I'm not interested in money,” he said. “I can get sufficient fun and satisfaction from life without it.”
Irish Arrange for
New York Welcome
NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P.).— Douglas Corrigan's friends, and they include all the Irish, were try= ing today to arrange a “hero's homecoming” for him, with a water pageant in New York harbor and a ticker tape parade up Broadway.
‘Fear Amateur Flier
Perished in Ocean
DETROIT, July 20 (U. P.).—Rel=atives of Davis D. Smith, 40-year=-
THIEN de,
house was interrupted in Criminal | old amateur aviator. were inclined Court today by an argument over | to believe today he had perished on the legality of a search warrant |a hop across the Atlantic Ocean in used in the raid when the men | his rebuilt monoplane. The autowere arrested. | mobile factory foreman has been The defendants were held fol- | missing since he departed from
lowing a raid on an Indiana Ave. |
establishment about three months ago by Sheriff Ray's deputies. Two of the men, Gus Gaines and Isaac Mitchell, were charged with keeping a gaming house. The 11 others were charged with visiting a gaming house. Judge Pro Tem. William Reilley postponed the trial until this afternoon to give attorneys opportunity to look up the Jaws covering search warrants, Sol Bodner,
defense attorney,
charged that the search warrant | ed
was faulty.
Wayne County Airport June 29.
‘Plane Repairs Delay
'Rumanian’s Flight
| NORWALK, Con, July 20 (U. { P.).—Mechanics said today it prob- | ably would take a month to repair | the airplane of Capt. Alexander Papana of the Rumanian Royal Air {| Force, which crashed yesterday. He | was taking it to Hartford for a final inspection before starting a project nonstop, 5000-mile flight to Bucharest.
| |
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