Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1938 — Page 4
RIPLE-SLAYER DENIED PAROLE
PLEA BY BOARD,
de Shot Wife, Poisoned Son,
Smothered Daughter, Report Says.
- Joseph Pyles, sentenced Jan. 29, 1921, in Blackford Circuit Court to life term for murdering his wife, was denied a parole today after the State Clemency Commission reits investigation showed he had smothered his daughter to
death, poisoned his son and killed
a horse with a pitchfork. His case was oné of 20 reviewed
the Commission, which granted |} :
three paroles, commuted four sen- ~ tences, continued one case and denied 12 other petitions. At the time Pyle killed his wife, ~ the Commission said he shot him-
>
Bucket Brigade
Ten huge steel “header” buckets are on their way to Grand Coulee Dam, to be used in transport-
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Times Photo.
P principal of the school.
j|dis if re-elected.
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PUPILS TO PROTEST IN PRINCIPAL’S FAVOR
DANVILLE, Nov. 22 (U. P.)— Pupils of the Danville High School had voted to strike and parade today in protest against the anticipated dismissal of J. R. Landis,
Mr. Landis appealed to the students to abandon their strike plans because it would do his cause more harm than good. The pupils held a meeting yesterday and voted on the plan. The student spokesman said the pupils learned that Tide M. Sears, township trustee, had decided to dismiss the principal at the end of the ensuing school term. In the
recent political campaign Mr. Sears pledged he would dismiss Mr. Lan-
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self through the temple and be-| ing concrete from mixing machines to forms for the ~~ Came totally blind. He claimed in ~ his petition that he knew nothing about the crime, but the Commission said that trial records showed
69
HOOVER IN CANADA
pany officials to grand union deTORONTO, Ont., Nov. 22 (U. P)).
mands—including seniority rights, a wage increase for 65 men now
~ he bought the gun for the purpose _ of killing his wife and went home and waited for her.
Other Crimes Charged
: “When she came he shot her, re- ~ loaded his gun, grabbed her by her ~~ hair, lifted her up, and while she ~~ Was pleading for mercy, shot her several times,” the Commission re- - ported. 5 “There is also information on file - that he poisoned one of ‘his sons,
- who was 18 years of age, by placing],
poison on a piece of pie; then later drove him to Montpelier where hebecame sick and died.” The Commission said that when he was under heavy expense for doctor pills because of the illness of his daughter, “he slipped into the girl's room and smothered her to ~ death, then walked out of the front door and went back into the kitchen * where he and his wife stayed two or - three hours before the daughter's body was discovered” Clyde O’Pherna, convicted in Marion County Criminal Court, September, 1933, to 15 years for first degree burglary, also was denied clemency.
Two Denied Pleas
The Commission said that he is wanted as a parole violator from the Ohio State Reformatory by the sheriff of Franklin County, Ohio. He escaped from the Franklin County Criminal Court room in CoJumbus after he had been convicted on a burglary charge and given a 10-to-12-year sentence in the Ohio State Prison, the Commission said. Before his capture here, O’'Pherna was charged with having burglarized 16 Indianapolis homes and a room in the hotel in which he was staying. Cleo Etheridge, convicted in Madison County Circuit Court and sentenced Jan. 3, 1934, to 10 years for robbery while armed, also was denied clemency. He and a companion were alleged to have held up and robbed young couples, in parked automobiles near Lafayette and Anderson.
~ FILE FINGERPRINT SET NO. 1,000,000
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 (U. P.) — ‘ The civilian identification section of the Federal Bureau of Investigation today received its. millionth set of fingerprints. The prints came from 12-year-old Ray Wesley Conover of Oakland, ‘Cal., who submitted his fingerprints through the 20-30 Club of Oakland. Prints in the civilian file—started late in 1933—are used ‘only for noncriminal identification. Fingerprints have resulted in identification of £00 dead persons this year.
EAT ‘BACKWARDS’ ON HOLIDAY, IS ADVICE
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 22 (U. P.). —Dr. Adolph Weinzirl, Portland health officer, urges people to eat their Thanksgiving = dinner back- « wards in the interest of better health. He said today that he expects to practice what he preaches... On Thanksgiving he will start out with his dessert, then attack the turkey and wind-up en salad.
(Te rier Thanksgiving OUTEFIT
OFFICERS CLEAR STOCKYARD BINS
C. I. 0. Union Walkout Puts Executives on Job Emptying Mart.
CHICAGO, Nov. 22 (U. P).— White-collar ‘commission men and company executives, acting under agreement with striking livestock
handlers, climbed into pens at the Union Stock Yards today to clear the mart of $2,000,000 worth of cattle, hogs and sheep. The men faced the task—one to which they were unaccustomed—of feeding, weighing and delivering to packers some 20,000 cattle, 35,000 hogs and 16,000 sheep before the 5 p. m., deadline set by union leaders for suspension of operations. The handlers, members of the Packinghouse Workers’ Organizing Committee, affiliate to the Congress for Industrial Organizations, went on strike without notice early yesterday, demanding increased wages and a signed contract. Union leaders agreed last night to permit the commission men and exchange officials to clear stock on hand and en route because they had not had time to notify farmers in advance that the tieup would take place. After 5 p. m., both sides agreed, the yards, largest in the world and normally an exchange for stock from 35 states and Canada, will suspend trading operations until the dispute is settled. Men in the trade said the strike had no immediate effect on retail prices at neighborhood butcher shops because packers have plenty of supplies on hand. They said there was no danger of a meat shortage in Chicago. The strike was directed at the Union Stock Yards & Transit Co, employing about 600 handlers. C. IL O. organizers have been attempting
being paid from 7 to 10 cents less than the present scale of 62% cents per “hour, an eight-hour day, 40hour week, time and a half for overtime, vacations, a written contract, closed shop, and check-off (collection of union dues by the company).
TRIBUNAL MAY HEAR CIVIL RIGHTS CASE
Direct Appeal to Supreme Court Held Possible.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 (U. P.). —Morris Ernst, attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, said today that he believed the Supreme Court had opened the way for a direct appeal to it in the Jersey City civil rights case. The court denied Ernst’s motion but added that the action was taken «without prejudice for a writ of certiorari in accordance with the rules of this court.” Usual procedure for Supreme Court reviews calls for issuance of a writ of certiorari calling on the court which last considered the case to send certified copies of all proceedings in the litigation. Ernst said that, in compliance with the “suggestion” in the order denying his motion, he would, file a petition for certiorari as soon as the necessary documents were printed. The original proceedings were heard in the Federal District Court for New Jersey, where Judge William Clark, since promoted to Circuit Judge, issued the injunction.
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