Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1938 — Page 3
Attacks on Tydings Give Him Stature; ELECTION BOARD Nevada otes Today
TUESDAY, SEPT. 6, 193%
itler Defies World Blockade;
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Adventure Waits Master Neal JURY SUMMONS
French Reveal Naval Moves; a. BN 6 MEMBERS OF
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SOD
Henlein Calls Sudeten Parley
nue ss coe BRITISH FLEET wo SETS SAIL FOR weston BATTLE GAMES
U.
2 & SUVS
Chilean Government Says 58 Killed in Revolt By ‘*Nacistas.’
: (U the
P) —Great | dark grax ps of the Home Fleet, steamed Channel
their
QOES
English take un
tO-
posts in
i tle station
European
ing down y battlerovers steam east and
dest to ~oast Imverned there by 10 » now being rushed stages of refitting They carry live
Rev olt i at : nit i n in xd of the ordinary a4 § + TY P) aumn 10
Former Chilean Dictator Reported Held in
S A N AG \ L ii Se 1euvers home concen-
: +35 m me
are to apa Flow, active quty wartime Grand fleet Brit:
1,500,000
Was
ak 10 gel was r believed Sir
Czechosloy as going Press into 11 Nevill h Ambassador t
ClieQ
hat
Soviet War Commissar Inspects Moscow Troops
ATOSCOW
oie
Ui
§ Sit
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Rebels Report Gain On Ebro River Front
HENI
A STATE WPA JOBS APPROVED RY F. D. R.
AA NE
TON, Sept. 6 (1
WASHING he office of
One Briton Reported Killed by Rebel! Bomb
Spanish
Q
A CeneY venorted
' INDIAN: IN I] / X i 'A Is the Draeffie Record
Deaths Arrests 13 Speeding 1
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Reckless Driving
A Deaths
Date
It
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Prefer
Street
Running ws al
enn
Running Red Light
yo38 16
jest T & 8 Ac cidents 20 Injured 11
Dead 0
Drunken Driving
Others
MEETINGS TOD
AY
Ate
DEATHS
Alpha Delta Omera
MEETINGS TOMORROW Jndiana State Fair, State Fa 6 4 G8) .
Kinanis Cal Lions Chad Indianapolis Connell Por. A. meet Beverage Credit Group
Yount Men's Discussion Clabh, Dinner M CA tp Mm Pardue
am Association
Co-Operative Clad of Mmdianapedis foval Ordasr ot Moose Chand
Ch nD trict American Yexion Sita Alpha Epsilon Pp het x gpolis Red 3
Management
Indiana clntion, luncheon Rin Gamma Rho fBheton 650 P Mm BIRTHS
Lars
| New
21k Shriver |
58. at Methodist, me
57. at 1638 Bellefontaine |
lice A t ¥ of hgart rothy Buresn, 4% Meihodist, J. McCarthy, 71, at ois 8° erine Steinmetz, at Methodist. oscierosis.
POLIS |:
| <lavia
I ewer My HOMBLTON.
| Nex York
Loyalist Agency Admits Retreat Before Insurgents.
(Continued from Page One)
fully economic existence within territory “Politically well as economically the time of Germany's isolation is over. The Reich has acquired great strong world powers as
the nation's
Tha oul
own as
: friends
“The uction
danger of Bolshevist deof nations is over-towering Ir world more menacingly than ever. We see in a thousand instances the action the Jew microbe of this world pest.’ In the section of the proclamation dealing with Jews, Herr Hitler saiq: The greatest enemy threatening to destroy our nation the international Jewish world enemy It was party's task clean the German nation, race and culture of enemy.” Then new commer
su
iT
onr 0 A iil
of
is the to this Ttaly’s he
a reference Jewish campaign,
10
ay
I may proclaim in my Ur name how deeply we are over another great European world power Is acting and decision cing irawn
gratified
and practi
} ~ NAA (
its own doctrines,
the most on wanted an force limitation pact Herr Hitler said: English weeks ago that I had a wish to conclude a pact with some states in various fields would not face this
however
“A All
otherwise it be possible year's party never haq this
oneress "
tion
am appearing before you des, not with a pact new German own homeland.’ the seven provinces of sorbed the greater
my comra seven disTICES of my He Austria
Germany
meant
mto
Henlein Calls Sudetens To October Congress
PRA 6 (U Konrad Henlel ting as negotiations on he ority problem neared a convoked the frst Party congress Nazi formula—for
HA, Sept P)
"
en at Aussie
‘Preparatory Measures’ Hinted by French Navy PARIS P) —French
e taken
measures”
Sept
8 (U cerof a was learned today
SONY oe Cle
ure, It while
mre 1K
troops and reservists poured the Maginot line of fortifications in answer to the manning of the G Siegfried Line on the other side of the frontier The popular temper was one of serenity determination to accept any challenge that might be
offer
red
OTN ay man
anq of
Developments
er
included: Daladier announced leaves been can- | and certain contingents of reservists called to the colors as an unavoidable precaution.” 2. All Navy officers and petty ofcers on leave from the great naval base at Toulon, on the Meaditerranwere recalleq The Foreign Affairs, War, Navy, hant Marine and Public Works stries ordered all important officials not to leave on scheduled vas | cations. 4 Albert Nogues, resident general of Morocco, and Armand Guillon. resident general of Tunis, in cone trol of France's great colonial army n Africa, 1 urgently for Marseilles to board airplanes for their \ after a long conference with Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet 3. M. Bonnet conferred with Sir Eric Phipps, British Ambassador: Count Rene Doynel de St. Quentin French Ambassador at Washington: Raymond Brugere, French Minister to Jugosiavia and Constantin Cesiano, the Rumanian Minister. Importance was attached to the talks with the Minister to Jugoand the Rumanian Minister here, as affecting two of the three | Little Entente allies of France—the | third being Czechoslovakia, central | nation of the crisis, France was | trying to line up all her friends in | her support. |
my had
led
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NYS oan
A FS 11
POSTE,
(
| collision 1 | Drive and Bethel Ave.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
United States Weather Bureawn
INDIANAPOLIS candy
FORECAST — Partly probably showers orf thunderstorms | tonitht And tamorraw: warmer tomorrow,
Sunrise 3:17 | Sunset
a TEMPERAT EE ~—Sept. 6 1 T— 33 i»
BAROMETER
MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana Mostly cloudy tonight Marron a » hovers or central
Pe)
n north and nt.
and thunaerportions exMostly tonight ana 3 hunderstorms probi north portions; Ww
or t a»
A extreme north chigan — Cloudy tonight Rowers probable; rising e Mostly elowdy tonight showers
with rising tempers ! tOMOrraw, probably in extreme portion Generally fair tonight sUIRRtIY warmer tomorrow.
Ohta ature Seih Kentveky
north and
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES St n Weather.
AT TAM | Bar, Temp 2 £1
CHD an I HN rw Sy OB
-y
BCC rrr rs CICS 08 ie I 5 HN Co 05 OB 3am OBES
oY £5 fbr 3 23
bite, Als. orjeans «. Okla. City, Okla. Omaha, Neb Pittsburgh Poruland, Ore SYN San Antonio, Tex San Francisée JONNY,
the fact that |
on its own experience | its cwn methods, | and | far-reaching | conclusions with admirable energy.” | reports that he |
Labor Day Week-End 'T
paper wrote a few | burning |
because |
{ his he apparently
| Evansville
| cent,
| ternal | to St
RIED LY wp AOI FLIRT PIII CO Pa Ot IE S338 231313583 8RRE 033! 5
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Behind these doors 1212 Calhoun St
387 l.ives in Nation, 26 1n
Two From Indianapolis Are Killed, 14 Injured Here.
(Continued from Page One)
hanging from a Authorities taken his
found orchard
had
was tree in said
own
own
life J WW be crash
wife
Leach, believed to killed in a Vincennes Sunday. His injured critically Thurman Lane, Indianapolis following injuries received struck by a car in Indianapolis Rurkert
mM his way
near was
3 died when John Indianapolis, died hospital after <tyruek y car in Indianapolis ana James of Danville Seymour, Sat23. Rrazil, killed when a car side-swiped his
Killed by
Weniger,
Truck August Weniger, 76. killed when he was struck by a truck near Lafayette Saturday night. Olen L. Wallace, 44, Omaha, Ga. killed Sunday when he was struck by a car on Road 31 near Austin Eugene Garrett and Thomas Morgan, both of Ridgeville, killed eight miles northeast of Muncie in a twocar collision. Chester Swathwood, 22, and Charles Roberts, 28, both of Mishawaka, decapitated when their car rolled over on a dead-end street at South Bend. Mrs. Ann Kuetemeier, 49, Indianapolis, injured fatally in a headon automobile crash at Ft. Wayne John Hines, 17, Kewanna, killed when his car rolled over near Rochester Saturday night Virgil Hornback, 27, burned to death in a fire at the house where he was living in Tipton Saturday Perry Schene, Batesville, died from gunshot wounds, Joseph Novak, 51, Oak Park, Ill., drowned in Lake Michigan near Michigan City when he attempted to swim to the aid of his wife who had fallen from a raft. She was saved. Clement Erhardt, 43, South Bend,
August
collision. Swathwood and 28. both of Misha-
29
their street
car
at
killed when his auto overturned near
South Bend.
14 Injured Here: Nuns in Hospital Seventeen motorists faced traffic charges today as 14 persons were injured overnight in 20 Indianapolis and Marion County traffic accidents Three Catholic nuns, teachers at St. Mary's School, Anderson, were among five persons injured in a collision yesterday at Sherman
motorists
Drive and Bethel Ave. They were riding in an automobile driven by Martha Hosek, 27, Anderson, which collided with another driven by Maynard Masten, 38, of 152 N. Third
Ave., Beech Grove.
The injured were Sister Paula, severe head lacerations; Sister Vincent, right arm broken, and Sister Miguel, ankle injury. Miss Joan Hogan, 19, Pendleton, who was rid ing with them, received head laceras tions, and Mr. Masten suffered internal injuries. They were taken to St. Francis’ Hospital. Otis Johnson, 39. of
307 Indiana
| Ave, was injured seriously last mids
night when the car in which he was riding, driven by Frank Wright, 31, of 430 N. West St, collided with a car driven by Mrs. Anna Nelson, 42. |
{of 2048 Raymond St, in the 3000 | block of Southeastern Ave. He was! {
taken to City Hospital.
adventure waits T'hey are the doors to St Master Neal attended this morning for to start, he ran away from home early
from |
| hundred feet | cord of the second
| death | mountain climber fell to his death in | New | suffocation in Ohio and Colorado. near | =
Three Killed in
| yeoeived in the accident.
Times Photo Master Neal Howe Jr. of Catherine's School which his first day. He was so anxious to get there. (Story, Page One)
for
State
Traffic Accounts for Most of Accident Toll in United States.
(Continued from Page One)
beaches and resorts. Shootings bings and suicides and airplane and miscellaneous accidents accounted for 87 deaths Illinois topped all other stat number of vielent with New York was second with 33, Ohio next with 30 deaths, 25 of were traffic
number
es
in deaths 35 was fatalities any 20. Then
which highest
01 state
igan followed with
Indiana with 28, Pennsylvania with 24 and California w states Marviand Rhode
No were
ith 23
Six boasied « Ay ar ona. Mexico
Carolina
lean slates Nevada New Island South in any these
and violent
reported
deaths form from states One ot was that of Edward Ray parachute jumper Terre Haute, Ind, who was killed vesterday while stunting at a Roanoke, Ill. air show He jumped from a balloon three parachutes tied to his back The opened He loosened it and it floated away. He fell several and pulled the ripI'he parachute jerk pulled
the most horrifying deaths 61-year-old
first
opened but the whole device and the parachute from his back and he dropped earth from an altitude of 1000 feet Three thousand persons saw him die Another parachute killed in eastern Pennsvivania. An airport manager was killed at Ottumwa, Iowa, when his plane crashed during a takeoff Russ Chambers, speed fiver, died at Cleveland from injuries suffered in a erash at the National Air Races A man was shot to death in a feud at San Antonio, Tex. Two per= sons were shot and two stabbed to in other Texas brawls: a
to
jumper
O
York: and one each died of
North Carolina Crash HAMLET, N. C, Sept. 6 (U. P). == A crash involving two heavily loaded autos left three persons dead, one woman critically injured, and five | others in hospitals here today R. M. Gibson, Columbia, Pa, and Miss Helen Bridges, Richmond County, N. C. were killed instantly | when the cars crashed during a heavy rain nine miles north eof Hamlet late vesterday. Mr. Gibson's wife died last night of injuries she
Work Being Speeded,
akes
| by
stab- |
Question Form
the | Mich- | came !
with |
the | third |
was!
Good Health!
Towne Dinner 50¢c
7 N. Meridian St.
Funds invested here by the TENTH September earn dividends fig= oR the FIRST day of Sep-
day of
Now is the time bond dollars safety,
Dividends pd Jaly 1st, 1938, at rate
3% per annum,
) WiC
ED
’ iY)
0 put your vagas TO WORK-=in insured
6ST TR
SAVINGS RAND LOAN RSS
A
Is Report; Ray May Be Heard This Week.
Six members of the primary election board who worked in Precinct 10, Ward 15, were called before the Grand Jury today to testify concerning alleged ballot irregularities The jury was reported to have speeded its investigation following special instructions given Friday hy Criminal Court Judge Frank P
Baker who urged that jurors “vote | on the question of indictments as
fast as precincts are investigated.” Meanwhile, Sheriff Rav, who charged he had never been invited to appear before the jurors, will be called to testify some time this week, Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer said. ‘The sheriff was invited through his attorney to testify several weeks ago and we were told he was ill,” Prosecutor Spencer said Deputy Prosecutor Knight, who assisting in the Grand Jury probe, said he “contacted Sheriff Rav's attorney three times and each time he told us the Sheriff was ill.” The Sheriff said “the impression has been given that I had been invited but failed to appear —= I am
Edward
1S
| willing to testify any time.”
He said he had more than 200
affidavits attesting various election | law violations !
JAP TOWN BURNS: 100 FEARED DEAD
TOKYO. Sept. 6 town of Tovama
(U. P).=The Himi near Takaoka, in prefecture, was virtually destroved by fire today. Officials estimated that approximately 100 persons were killed or missing. I'mo thousand homes, the town hall. the postoffice, the police station and a primary school were destroved The flames were fanned a typhoon which swept Japan
In Opinion Polls Called Decisive
(Other Stories, Page 11)
{ R 1038. hy Science Service) COLUMBUS, Sept. 6.=The inside storv of how nation-wide polis of public opinion are conducted so as to give national feeling was disciosed last night by Dr. Henry C. Link of the Psychological Corp. of New York, at the meeting of the American Assos ciation of Applied Psychologists Personal interviews conducted in from 4000 to 10,000 homes ‘n 48 cities and towns are enough of a
Convright
sample to give a true cross-section |
of American public opinion if the questions are properly worded and
the survevs are handled by experts, | | Dr.
Link's experience indicates. “If a question is worded wrong, interviews with a sample of 50,000 people will give a result that is not as accurate as interviews with 5000 people using the correct question,”
| he said.
PROPOSES REINSTATEMENTS WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (U. P). A National Labor Relations Board examiner recommended today that the Board order the Ford Motor Co. to reinstate 129 discharged workers with back pay at the Richmond, Cal, assembly plant.
central |
a true barometer reading of |
Roosevelt Promises to
| Try to Keep Party Liberal,
(Continued from Page One)
the population, casts 34 of the 149 county-unit votes in the convention or nearly 25 per cent. The President worked his smile He called up all his magic. In his major speech, at Denton, he ems=ployed his fighting tones. In southern Maryland, on Sunday, { he dangled a three-million dollar bridge across the Potomac to Virginia before the crowd assembled in a sun-baked field at Morgantown. They want that bridge. He praised the land, its long history. But in seeking to interfere Maryland, Mr. Roosevelt seems to give new stature to Senator Tydings. A politeian hitherto of no major consequence even in his own state, but now made into a symbol about which have gathered the robes of tradition and of states’ rights, and in which is concentrated the resentment against outside interference. Senator Tydings has become sud{denly an imposing figure people who have taken him rather lightly heretofore.
Tydings Signs Prominent
He was in Baltimore during
thanks to his vigilant henchmen
( who had passed along Mr, Roose= velt's route ahead of the Presidential procession and nailed his pice ture with the slogan “re-elect Tydings” on to every tree in sight. The people generally were friendly and courteous, despite the signs. Qccasionally there was a gay shout from someone in the crowd, “ ‘Ray for Tydings.” to a large audience at Salisbury gathered about the schoolhouse, and | from far and near they came to fill the street and stand about the | courtyard at Denton to hear the President praise Davey Lewis by name and damn Senator Tydings with innuendoes that were under- | stood. [ Even there, the Senator's men { had been busy. Just to the left and back of the President as he spoke was a big sign nailed on a lawyer's “We want Tydings.”
| office: | Farley Is Glum
The only suggestion that Rep. Lewis was in the race for Senator, until the President spoke of him at Denton, was a handful of signs on one short stretch of the road. There
its people, |
m |
among |
| the | President's visit, but his shade was | constantly present on “the Shore,” |
Mr. Roosevelt spoke |
Lewis over it will take a lot of some= | thing between now and Monday.” |
Roosevelt Speaks for 'Farm-Factory Unity
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (U. P.).— | President Roosevelt's drive against conservative Democratic leaders took definite form today as a summons
to agricultural and industrial labor to unite politically and permanently, his stated objective is to keep the Democratic Party “liberal.” On the issue of a liberal party supported by those elements and | others among the electorate, Mr. Roosevelt made a spectacular Labor Day appeal to Maryland voters to | remove Senator Tydings from the Senate. Back at his Hyde Park headquart=ers today for several weeks he awaits returns from three primaries in the next fortnight for scattered | popular judgment on his plans. His address indicated that he feels that the stake is as great as those for which Washington and Lincoln played because “our own | time has brought a test of our | American Union.” “The great test for us in our time | Is whether all groups of our people are willing to work togetner for continuing progress,” he said. “Such progress comes from the | rank and file of our citizens, and | through the representatives of their free choice—representatives willing to co-operate, to get things done in the spirit of give and take—not representatives who seek plausible exe cuse for blocking action.” | Mr. Roosevelt declared that both { farm and factory workers had been “exploited” and he told the Eastern Shore men and women who gathe (ered to hear him that a “conservae tive” minority was trying to “drive a wedge between the farmers on the jone hand and their relatives and | their logical partners in the cities {on the other.”
Tydings Reports $11,800 Bills Unpaid
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (U. —Senator Tydings (D. Md.) today reported total campaign expende | itures of $37,024 and $11,869 in une paid bills to the Senate Campaign Investigating Committee. He listed contributions of $35,« 957.64. Senator Tydings’ opponent, Rep. David J. Lewis, reported on Aug. 30 total contributions of $7,725 with equal expenditures and $5,145 bills payable, for a total expense of $12,920. | Senator Tydings filed a series of { complaints with the Committee, ale leging coercion of Federal employees | to support Rep. Lewis.
P).
i were no shouts of “’Ray for Lewis” |
anywhere along the route. I'he legislator, who has made a record for himself in the House here—as the President recalled at Dentonwas almost a forgotten man. A mite of a figure, he sat far back on the platform at Denton, con{cealed by Mr, Farley's broad ex- | panse, The Postmaster General and National Chairman wasn't his usual cheerful self. This is one “purge” movement in { which he is wholeheartedly enlisted. | But Jim Farley does not like the | frontal assault employ2d by the | President. He likes to arrange these
| things quietly, without a lot of pub- | He looked gloomy and | of political Hamlet. |
| lie friction. { morose, a sort Everywhere, though, he held court | to local politicians who sought him out. It may turn out that Mr. Far- | ley in his quiet way, accomplished more than the President. i “It's certain that if they put Mr.
McCarran Favorite
In Nevada Primary
RENO, Nev, Sept. 6 (U. P).— Senator McCarran, member of the Democratic Senatorial bloc that op=posed President Roosevelt on ree organization of the judiciary and Govermental departments, was a | 4-to-1 choice to be renominated | today in Nevada's Democratic prie | mary. { Senator McCarran was opposed { by two “100 per cent” New Dealers, | Albert Hilliard and John E. Worden. | Former Senator Tasker L. Oddie | was unopposed for the Republican nomination. The Democratic gubernatorial | candidates are E. P. Carville, Harley { Harmon and Charles L. Richards. | The only Republican contest in {the primary is that between Sam | Durkee and John M. Fulton for Governor.
STOP THIS SLAL
2
ene
*
DISPLAY THIS
Colorful Poster SENT FREE on REQUEST
LS
CHIR
Each year at the opening of school Employers MuTUAL distributes thousands of posters such a; these as a part of an intensive accident prevention program. poster is 17x22 in., printed in four colors, and is a com pelling appeal for Safe Drive ing. Send for a copy Post it mm a conspicuous place. The poster is free address office below!
SCHOOL HAS BEGUN
Dont Take a Life — Drive Carefully!
® Nothing is so pitiful as the broken body of a child! In dreadful contrast to the bouncing vigor it once contained, it lies still and crushed -- its delight in being alive cut short forever, If it were your child you know how you would feel. Don’t bring that anguish to another father and mother. Automobiles are responsible for the death or injury of thousands of youngsters every year. This slaughter can be stopped by thoughtful driv ing. The beginning of school calls for extra driving care - extra caution « especially near schools. Don’t risk the responsibility of an accident!
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