Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1939 — Page 1

The Indianapolis Times

FORECAST: Local showers tonight or tomorrow and Sunday; not much change in temperature.

FINAL HOME

PRICE THREE CENTS

VOLUME 51—NUMBER 59

4000 JAPS ARE DEAD IN FIGHT CHINESE CLAIM

Report Tungpeh Capture and ‘Second Biggest Victory’ Of Whole War.

FOREIGN SITUATION SHANGHAI — Chinese claim second biggest victory of war. TOKYO — Newspaper criticizes U, 8S. WASHINGTON Probe of Japanese in Philippines asked. JERUSALEM — British soldier killed, 150 wounded in rioting. LONDON-—Britain offers concessions if Hitler renounces force. MADRID—200,000 troops parade to celebrate Franco victory.

SHANGHAI, May 19 ( Chinese troops have Tungpeh, north of River, killing 4000 Japanese troops in their second biggest victory of the Chinese-Japanese war, Chinese dispatches asserted today. Tungpeh is on the border of

U. P)recaptured

Honan and Hupeh Provinces, 140

miles northwest of Hankow. Fighting had been proceeding in the area for some time, According to the Chinese advices, Chinese stormed the Japanese lines and captured the city after 48

hours of hand-to-hand fighting in the suburbs and the city streets,

Japanese Silent

Chinese troops pursued fleeing Japanese remnants and reoccupied a number of villages in the area, according to the Chinese reports. The Chinese asserted that it was their biggest victory since the battle of Taierchwang, in the Soochow area, early in the war. It had been noticed here that Japanese reports had been almost silent regarding the Honan area for two days before the Chinese reports of a victory. Dispatches from Chungking asserted that Chinese pursuit planes turned back a fleet of Japanese bombers and shot down two. The Japanese, it was said, were bound for Chungking, the capital, when the Chinese planes encountered them near Kueifu at the head of the Yangtze River gorges.

Shanghai Searched

United States Marines and British soldiers aided police today in blocking off various parts of the Interna-

tional Settlement with street barri-| raiding Chinese hotels|

cade and and homes in search of Chinese “terrorists.” The raids, ordered by Settlement authorities, were intended to remove any basis for Japanese complaints that anti-Japanese elements were being permitted to operate freelv under the protection of foreign authority The American Post Mercury Co. which published the Chinese language Tam-Ei-Pao, asked the

American Consulate General to pro-'

test to French Concession authorities against the confiscation of today's issue of the paper, and he requested damages International Settlement authorities had previously suspended the newspaper for publishing part of a speech by Chiang Kai-shek

British on Guard in

Palestine Rioting

JERUSALEM, Mav 19 (U. P) British soldiers and British and Jewish police guarded the debrislittered streets of Jerusalem, Tel-

Aviv and other cities today, watch- |

ing for further outbreaks by Jews in their bitter anger over British proposals for the future of Palestine, Lieut. Gen. R. H Haining, commanding the troops, called Zionist leaders to him and warned that “force will be met with force” in suppressing disorders. One British soldier and one British constable was killed and more than 150 civilians, including poiice. were injured here in riots last night. One British soldier was wounded by shots fired from a rioting crowd. Police fired over the heads of crowds after vigorous charges with their elubs had failed to disperse rioters. Police had to carry special shields to guard themselves against showers of stones.

More than 40 persons were injured | at Tel-Aviv in serious disorders there, |

(Continued on Page Four)

ATTEMPT TO REMOVE

OPEN PIN IN THROAT

City Hospital physicians this afternoon were to attempt removal of an open safety pin from the throat

them |

the Yangtze|

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Seven miles—downtown te Municipal Airpori—in just a few minutes! says it is possible if the City will convert the Indiana Railroad roadbed

which soon may be abandoned, into a paved “bee-line” highway.

i i

KING APPROVES

ROPER AS ENVOY

British Sovereign Says He. Anticipates U. S. Visit With Pleasure.

Threatened With Shower

AL TEMPERATURES «v8 10a mm «68 1am «is 13 13 (moon) TH! 1pm

LOC

Thunder showers tomorrow and Sunday were predicted today by the Weather Bureau as racers prepared for the first qualifying trials tomorrow at the Speedway J. H. Armington. meteorologist, said the showers may varv in intensity, and that some of them might even bring a halfinch precipitation. There will not be change in temperature, predicted.

| By WEBB MILLER United Press Staff Correspondent | OTTAWA, May 19 (U. P) —With, a slight nod of his head, King George VI today gave royal assent to a treaty with the United States— first time a British sovereign ever personally has approved a bill passed by the Canadian Parliament. The ancient ceremony of roval| assent lasted half an hour in the red-carpeted Senate chamber, andj the first bill signed with the royal] “George R” was the Canadian-|___ {American trade treaty { Sitting in front of the dais was Daniel C. Roper, former Secretary) lof Commerce, whose credentials as| | American Minister to Canada were { handed to the King today Mr. Roper brought the King surances of friendship from Presi-| dent Roosevelt and “genuine good wishes for the continued happiness land well being of the Canadian | people.” { “I have the honor to place in the | hands of Your Majesty the letter MANILA. Mav 19 (U. P) —Four {whereby the President accredits me thousand inhabitants of Verde Ise as envoy extraordinary and Min- land began exacuating their homes ister Plenipotentiary of the United today as earthquakes which started States to Canada.” Mr. Roper said. Mav “The President asks that I conveys : (Continued on Page Four)

much he

4000 FLEE HOMES ON ROCKING ISLAND

Quakes Continue in Verde; Report Interior Sinking.

as-

"-

1 continued. Governor Vicente Caedo of Ba{tangas notified the Department of

RECEIVER SOUGHT | IN GROSS TAX FIGHT

State Pushes Case Against Ft. Wayne Grocer.

gradually is sinking. He believed volcanic activity to be responsible for the quakes. Artesian wells normally cold now are near the boiling point. he said. The Interior Department patched scientists to Verde and instructed Mr. Caedo to determine whether complete evacuation of the island is necessary. It is estimated { that 2000 families, mostly fishermen, {have abandoned the towns of San

FT. WAYNE, May 19 (U. P).— Augustin and San Agapito.

The State of Indiana today had be- g gun suit against Elzie D. Redding, a | eliometers. grocer, seeking the appointment of a | receiver for his business because of | his alleged failure to pay State] gross income tax. | The action was brought by Depuity Attorney General Bernard O'Neill. (It was filed only after every other means of collecting the tax had been

Speed Trials WPA WILL FEED

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| three unionists.

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Interior that the interior of Verde mented

dis-!

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The nonworking miners. |island covers an area of 15 square is distributing between 18 and 20 today said he will call the Federal and half business”

FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1939

TRUCK DRIVER AND CHILD DIE IN ACCIDENTS

'Head-on Collision West of,

Plainfield Is Fatal to | Reelsville Man.

BOY IS HIT-RUN VICTIM

————

Struck Near Losantville; Two Are Injured Here, 52 Arrested.

A child and a truck driver died | {in traffic on Indiana highways out'side the City. | Two persons were hurt here as|

{overnight accidents dropped to | leight. Police arrested 52 motorists. The victims were Wilbur Madden, 27-year-old truck driver of Reels-| : (ville, Ind, who was fatally injured | ¢ |in a head-on collision on Road 40] [three miles west of Plainfield, and | Victor Poindexter, 12, of near Los|lantville. The latter was Killed by a hit-and-run driver near there yes- ! |terday, state police said. Mr. Madden was driving a trans-| |port truck west and it collided with |

Entered as Second-Class Matter Indianapolis,

at Postoffice,

Faster Doomed

another driven in the opposite di-| :

t [rection by William Mathews, 24, of (131 S. Hawthorne Lane, Indianapolis, according to police reports.

| Cab Ripped Off Truck

| The cab of Mr. Madden's truck | was ripped off and he was hurled | with it over a 15-foot embankment, | witnesses said. | Mr. Mathews was taken to a] | Greencastle hospital where the ex-| tent of his injuries had not been | determined. { The Poindexter boy was walking | (near his home with a cousin when | struck. The cousin told State Police the driver said he would get a | doctor, but never returned. The boy gave police the license | number of the car. They said it! was stolen at Toledo last month.

Woman and Daughter Hurt {

Those injured here were Mrs. Martha Rosebrock, 38. of R. R. 4, {Box 518, Indianapolis, and her| daughter, Martha 13. They| were taken to St. Francis Hospital |after a collision at Madison Ave {and Pleasant Run Bivd. Joseph R. Jones, 38, of Morgantown, driver of the other car, was charged by police with being drunk Five charges were filed against Charles H. Davis, 43, of 2744 Winthrop Ave. after they said his auto struck a parked car on Winthrop Ave, 2800 block. Charges were | drunkenness, operating while under | the influence of liquor, leaving the] |scene of an accident, reckless drive ing and vagrancy.

Times Photo I J. Dienhart, airport head (dotted line in this air photo),

MINE STRIKERS

Murphy Sends Aids by Plane As Deadlock Persists In Kentucky.

am : ts {his car struck a fire hydrant on W.| HARLAN, Ky., May 19 (U. P). —|yaghington St., 1000 block, flooding Federal food was made available to the street. They charged him with

striking Harlan County coal miners failure to have a driver's license by the WPA today. and leaving the scene of an acci-|

" dent. Che county was quiet as a dead- . lock persisted between the United

Mine Workers Union and the Har- WARFLEIGH SEWER lan County Coal Operators Associa-

| |

tion. National Guardsmen arrested

Attorney General Frank Murphy

— in Washington announced two top- Property ‘owners to Pay |

flight Justice Department aids were | | to arrive by airplane in Harlan to-| $105,000 Cost. day to make a first-hand inquiry into civil liberties in the strike area.! The aids were Assistant Attorney | Sreneral Brier Moston snd Henry sanitary sewer, to be built by the ments civil liberties wait + PAF City at a cost of $105,000 and with | WPA plans were announced by| WPA labor, were approved by the Adeline Kell, Assistant State WPA | Works Board today. | Administrator, who arrived in Har-| mne sewer will serve the war- | lan today. She said the Federal Sur- n > ‘ : plus Commodities Corp. is shipping | fleigh community and will extend | “great quantities of food" into Har- from Arden Addition

the lan to be distributed to “anyone in|sewer at White River and Cornell need.”

ISt. to the pumping station at MeShe said supplies sufficient to : i p nal, Se feed thousands of miners for ridin St. and the Canal a di

aby st two miles least a month were being sent, jtance of alinoSt INVES:

main |

The WPA staff in the county was augto handle assistance requests expected from several thousand miners. About 500 strikers al- | —— ready have been certified for as-| sistance. Hundreds arrived by REORGANIZATION MOVED UP truck in Harlan to register for aid.| WASHINGTON, May 19 (U. P| WPA said no distinction would (~The Senate today approved with- | be made between those already get- out objection a joint resolution | ting U. M. W, relief and those with- | making President Roosevelt's two out means of assistance. It said Government reorganization the decision to furnish large-scale effective July 1. i was ew i s 1 — — ———— aid was mad hen mine company | GRAND JURY CALL DUE |

stores ceased allowing credit to! The U. M. W.| U. 8S. District Attorney Val Nolan |

| The Board did not set a date for hearings on the project. The $105, | 000 will be assessed against property owners.

tons of food daily in the county. I Grand Jury to meet May 31. i

| starve

(on cot)

ENID. Okla., May 19 (U. P.) Roy Murphy, who threatened to himself to death rather than face trial for the murder of his brother, Harry, today was found guilty by a jury which recommended that he be electrocuted. Murphy, who fasted 22 days before he was held sane, lay on a cot when the verdict was read. He continued to stare at the ceiling as if he had not heard. His wife broke into tears. Judge J. W. Bird will sentence him June 5. Murphy also was killing Harry's wife, Sarah

accused of Mae

| Murphy, but he was tried only on | the fratricide charge.

RISK FAILURE |

T0 SELL BEER

ABC Lets 21 Applicant Make Own Decisions on Economic Question.

S

Beverage it

Alcoholic today announced

The State Commission

Pau! Roberts, 21, of 955 S. West would permit the 21 remaining ap-|1ndjanola Ave.; Sheldon Ave, from St, was arrested after police said | plicants for beer wholesaler permits| 46th to 52d St, to Rosslyn Ave.

to decide for themselves the economic question of the beverage busi-

ness. The Commission began calling in applicants for conferences on the crowded conditions of the territories in which they hoped to sell beer. Several of the applicants said they would be willing to risk bankruptcy and in case their businesses failed “would not blame the State* Hugh A. Barnhart, excise admin-

listrator, said many cities of the|1320 feet south of 52d, to Allenbee|qqmpaion has

State already have enough beer wholesalers to handle all the busi-

ness. “We will ask the new applicants

[whether they think any more deal- | ! Specifications for the Warfleigh ers could make a living,” he said.|made by the City Engineer for name

The Commission two months ago turned down the first application from Petersburg on the ground there already were enough wholesalers there. This case now is pending in the Indiana Supreme Court on an appeal.

The Commission earlier in the

week granted the first four permits

under the new Liquor Law amendments which removed the limit on

[the number of beer wholesalers in reach county.

Deliberation on the remaining 21 applications was halted temporarily pending the conferences.

DR. D. S. ROBINSON IS BUTLER VISITOR

Dr. Daniel Sommer Robinson,

plans president-elect of Butler University, | [visited the campus today and met) [the faculty informally in the office |

of President James W. Putnam. He said his visit was “half social and said he will return next week.

Harlan County Marksmen Bow Heads in Shame; Shots Ring Out in Mine Clash, No One’s Even Nicked

Ind.

DIES SUBPENAS GEN. MOSELEY AND HAMILTON

| | Felix McWhirter Also Called to Testify on

Monday Regarding Alleged Anti-Semitic Campaign Involving Fantastic Plot.

WITNESSES PARADE WINDOW LEDGE

New York Millionaire Tells Committee of Reports of Scheme to Overthrow Government Through War.

WASHINGTON, May 19 (U. P.).—The House Commit= tee Invetigating un-American Activties decided today | to subpena Chairman John D. M. Hamilton of the Republics ‘an National Committee and Maj. Gen. George Van Ilorn Moseley, retired, in its inquiry into an asserted anti-Semitic campaign. The first story of the campaign, as revealed by Rep, Martin Dies (D. Tex.), Committee chairman was a com= plicated account of an alleged plot to overthrow the Govern‘ment and of measures by the asserted anti-Semitic group ‘to counteract that plot. The Committee also

38 STREET NAM CHANGES ASKED

Zoning, City Plan Boards | Will Act at Meeting Next Monday.

for . Althe

decided to issue subpenas "George Deatherage of St bans, W. Va., chief of ‘Knights of the White Cas melias, an organization accused by liberals of dissems inating anti-Semitic propaganda and charged hy liberal publications with having a | Fascist cast. | A fourth subpena, the committee Isaid, will be issued for Felix Mc- | Whirter of Indianapolis, retired (lieutenant commander in the Naval City Engineer M. G. Johnson to-| Reserve, president of the People's day recommended changes in the State Bank and Republican State . : J [Committee treasurer names of 26 streets in a report t0| In his initial disclosure of the in=|the City Plan Commission. |vestigation, Rep. Dies said that | The recommendations will be ny McWhirter was another correacted on by the Commission and spondent of Capt. Campbell's. Rep. Zoning Board of Appeals Monday. Dies said that Mr. McWhirter ine George Rooker, secretary-engineer| quired of Capt. Campbell whether of the Commission, said that the | pps. Cordell Hull, wife of the Secrecommendations, if approved, would | petary of State. former Governor then be sent to the City Council Alf np Landon of Kansas and Wile (which has the power to change|jiam Allen White. famed Emporia, | street hames. Li | Kas, editor, had any Jewish blood. Fiopusel CHRNBES a che hemes, In Indianapolis, Mr. McWhirter of 12 s S were as y “(refused to comment either on this Rost Civic League. They are: Ar- his

report or on the committee subpena, (senal Ave. from 46th to 52d Sts. 10| The committee decided io call Mr.

(Deatherage shortly after he had de (clared that it was “afraid” to sum-= Schofield Ave., from 46th to 52d St..|mon him for testimony about purto Buckingham Ave.. Hovey St. ported subversive movements in the {from 46th to 52d, to Primrose Ave.) |{rnited States. Sangster Ave. from 42d to 52d, to| Norwaldo Ave.: Manlove Ave, from 142d to 52d, to Crittendon Ave. Bal-| The committee approved the sub timore Ave. from 42d to 52d, %0|ne nas after Rep. Dies said that Evanston Ave.; Caroline St. from gen Moseley, Dudley Pierpont GilClay St. to a point 547 feet south of pert New York millionaire socialite, 52d St., to Burlington Ave.; Hillside gn4 5 number of other persons were Ave, from 45th St. to a point 1320 engaged in a campaign to counter= feet south of 52d St. to Cambridge ae 5 subversive plot against the Ave.; Brouse St. from 47th St. t0 Government. Rep. Dies said the a strong anti-Semitic

Secrecy Is Melodramatio

Ave.; 48th St. from the Monon Rail- oat road tracks to Keystone Ave, t0| Gen, Moseley has been the house [49th St. and 49th St, from Arsenal | gest of Mrs. W. Kenyon Jewett at |Ave. to Baltimore Ave., to 51st St. [pasadena for the last week, but af Fourteen other recommendations ihe jewett home servants reported [today that Gen. Moseley was ‘out of the city on a trip for a few days." Mr. Hamilton's name was men=tioned in the investigation by James Erwin Campbell, 42, a retired Army (captain of Owensooro, Ky., who tes- | tified before a closed committee ses= sion vesterday. Rep Dies said Capt, (Campbell was active in the campaign. The secrecy of yesterday's hearing was melodramtic. Several of the wit=

[changes are: An unnamed public | way extending northwestward from the intersection of 29th St. and E.| | Riverside Drive to White River, to be named W. 29th St.; an unnamed public way extending northwestward from the intersection of W. | Michigan and Limestone Sts. to { White River, to be named W. Michligan St. | W. Michigan St. from Limestone St. to White River, to be named

nesses were escorted from one com=Continued on P e [peas | — tinged n Page Thre ) (mittee room to another by way of

| narrow ledges outside windows five

| stories above the ground. Rep. Dies H IER PAROLEE said this was done so that witnesses

| would not see each other Legion Officers Get Reports |

Rep. Dies said that “highly confldential’ reports of the alleged plot to overthrow the Government wers in sent by participants in the campaign to a select list of 40 persons, many of whom were American Legion officials and retired Army of« ficers. Rep. Dies said Capt. CampA paroled Pendleton Reformatory|bell's correspondence showed that prisoner has been captured at Fay-| he had asked, and received, from lette County, Idaho, on charges of Mr. Hamilton the names of Repub- | participating in the $2300 robbery|lican national committeemen and {of the Linden State Bank a week!committeewomen for his mailing ago today, G-Men here announced. list. The suspect, 28, of Frankfort, will| Capt. Campbell denied, Rep. Dies be returned here, authorities said. |[said, that he sent the confidential | G-Men declared he had been reports to the Republicans. Capt. identified as one of the bandits by Campbell said they were sent copies | pictures shown to Howard Davis, of Gen. Moseley's speeches. | bookkeeper, who was in the insti- | Rhea Whitley, Dies Committee | tution alone when the robbery oc-| counsel, telegraphed Mr. Hamilton,

daho Captive Wanted Linden Bank Holdup. |

of a 21-year-old woman. | exhausted, Mr. O'Neill said | However, the guardsmen are said |Titler, county head of the union, than 1200, that they and their fam-| curred. He was locked in the vault Gen. Moseley, Mr. Deatherage and them

City Jail officers said she swal- | lowed the pin while she was in her! cell awaiting a hearing on a drunkenness charge,

Mr. O'Neill entered a plea in the Time Svecinl Weiter Allen County Superior Court to. HARLAN, Ky, May 19.-—Harlan

withdraw a petition filed several County bowed its head in puzzled weeks ago which asked the State be shame today at reports that as

made a party defendant to a suit | brought by the Ft. Wayne Food many as 500 shots had been fired

By FRED W. PERKINS

to have been instructed to shoot over the heads of the “attacking party.” While the reports vary widely on how many shots were fired, they

declared: [ilies are subject to constant harass- “ fo ment, threats and, intimidation at I am of the opinion that no night from the union members tryunion men came over the mountain jno to influence them against going and that there was no shooting by back into the mines.

them. I think the affair was staged| F. E. Pettus, a young workman

(Mr. McWhirter, informing [that they had been subpenaed and [requesting them to attend a meeting the Committee here Monday at

T0 MORE THAN POINT i's p. m. He asked each to advise

m whether they would accept

for 25 minutes.

STOCKS MAKE GAINS

at the Totz mine, where until today

|service of the subpenas upon their

| Council on behalf of Redding, John | in the first fusillade of the current agree that a party of about 40 non- as propaganda to get more state A. Heiny and others. The council mine troubles, with nobody being union miners was being taken to troops into Harlan County.” [suit asked the court to enjoin Sheriff even pinked. (work on the first “man trip” up the| One of the nonunion men whe!

alter Felger from serving wi n Yau 1 {long inclifie that leads to the mouth | were S bly the targets for the Ww ge g warra ts) Here where the mountain men | Were presumably 8 > [since Monday failed to answer the |a rally from early uncertainties.

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

(tension has been tightest, and NEW YORK, May 19 (U. P.).—|amival or “whether it will be nece which did not open yesterday be- Gains ranged to more than a point (Continued on Page Three) cause men who had been working in the stock market today following it ———

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Books Broun Clapper Comics Crossword Curious World Editorials Fashions Financial van Forum Gallup ..., ® In Indpls. .. 3 Jane Jordan. 19

Movies ‘ Mrs. Ferguson Obituaries. . ., Pegler Pyle Questions Radio . Mrs. Roosevelt Scherrer

REEL

ae

“an

for delinquent payment of the RN 1 ‘of High Splint Mine No. 2. fs id as he came from the 9g| The YY Rs the petition to be | have & reputation of being able 10 Near the “head house,” at the top | Sing sai and grimy from the| Whistle, expressed a viewpoint| At the opening, U. S. Steel issues) 20| withdrawn. | pick off a mosquito at 50 yards, and of the incline, firing. began from a day's toil: |joined in by many of his com- had dropped below par to a new 2 i ——— |a squirrel has practically no chance party of men said to have “come “Maybe some of us were scared. Panions: low for the year. At midsession, 2 GR AND JURY at 200, a gorge between two wooded over the mountain” during the I don't know what the effect will| “If the union was fighting for most issues were around the tops | 19 INDICTS heights echoed with shooting, and night. Four guardsmen, placed on be except for myself—I'm going higher wages or shorter hours I'd!for the day established around | yuiius Becker, 42. Zionsville, chief 19 15 IN 18 RETURNS iajer echoed with questions as to advance information that such an back to work. You only have to die | be with it. But ‘all it's after is noon. mechanic at the pump house in the H w 2 aid it and why. : (attack was planned, returned the once, and a man might as well be more dues for John L. Lewis and SS ———————. World War Memorial, fell today 19 Ss ee EE ereuted re, knocked off fighting for his rights the other big boys of the mine| HITLER'S FRIEND LOSES SUIT 410015 feet onto a concrete floor. 13) The Marion County Grand Jury ht of Hption that the marks-| Members of the United Mine as for something else.” | workers.” | LONDON, May 19 (U, P.).—Ernst| He was taken in a City AmbuSerial Story. 34|today returned its sixth partial re! to yl on e were miners native Workers, who are attempting to From another section of the coun-| Underneath there is a ferment of (Putzi) Hanfstaengl, one-time lance to the U. S. Veteran's Hose Society ..... 329 Pore. rerare 15 Nh Ba nl Ie: i Ti sect Jon Seite those of the | bring Harlan County coal operators ty came a delegation of 45 “back | resentment among the union miners friend of Adolf Hitler, lost a libel pital and was said to have injured Qa Sports . 28. 20, 30|dictments Eight Pe those. In dicted a dioining B ationa Suaasten of [to terms by refusing to work, im- | to workers” to tell Brig. Gen. Eller- against the presence of the guards- suit today against Selfridge & Co, his hip and back. He and T. C. State Deaths 25 are fugitives Charges a ainst 201 has a he ion ou A site edintely asserted that “the whole bee W. Carter, commanding the Na-|men, producing a condition that | department store. The jury as-| Malia, 2850 E. Washington St., were 'Wiggam ..... 20! persons were ignored ag | paso TeDw n of proficiency w ing Was engineered by the other |tional Guardsmen reinforced dur- might explode through unwise acts | sessed Hanfstaengl. the costs of the repairing some hinges of a trap » 3 w side,” and after investigating George ling the day to a strength of more or carelessness by either side. trial, ~ 'door when the accident ngcurred. \ 3 »

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