Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1939 — Page 7
'
TUESDAY, SEPT.
AS STATETAKES LABOR HOLIDAY
Twelve Die in Traffic and Four Are Victims of Other Accidents.
———
Twelve persons were dead today
from injuries received in Hoosier | .
Labor Day traffic and four died in| other accidents, Although Indianapolis was host
» 1939
Re mcs
te thousands of State Fair visitors!
yesterday, not a single fatal accident was reported in Marion County. Ten persons were injured, however, one of them seriously, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fouts of Miami County were Killed when thelr car collided with another on Road 1€ near Denver, Ind.
Killed in South Rend
Peter Mielesrewicr, 63. of South Rend, was injured fatally when struck hy a car. Hit death ended # 159.dar run of deathless days in South Rend. A baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs Marshall Doss of Evansville was killed in a collision on Highway 41) near Ft. Branch, The parents and a grandparent alse were injured Ivan Williams, 17 sonof Ira Wil liams, a Sullivan County farmer, was Killed when his car hit a bridge rail near Vincennes. Jahn A. Kirk, 82 of near Harelton, was killed hy a Southern Railroad train while walking near his home, Thomas Monevhun, 353, Anderson light plant engineer, was burned fatally when his clothing was ignited by an explosion at the plant Mrs, Augusta Waltz, 77, of Grovertown, was killed when the car in which she was riding overturned r La Porte. Four others were
Struck by Aute
John Van Cleve, 60, of Charlestown was injured fatally when he was hit by a car driven by Ross A. Miller of Rettendorf, Towa. William Morton, Chicago, was killed when the car in which he was riding crashed into a bridge in Parke County Earlier, Cyril E. Gagnon of Chicago and Vernon King of Marion died in Hoasier traffic accidents Vernon Dragoon Jr, 15, af near Cammack, was injured fatally when k on the back of the head by a horseshoe pitched by a friend,
Prowns at Lake
ctr)
lifelong resi drovned Sunsailboat in which he riding capsized in the middle of Lake Wanasee He was 35. Serv. ices will be at R:30 a. m. Thursday at the home and at 2 a. m. at the Hol Sus Church. Burial is to he at Holy Cross Cemetery, At Ft. Wayne, 8l-vear-old Karl Winkler died of shock following amputation of his leg which was}
Earl Custard dent of Indianapolis
James
day when a
wax
crushed when he was struck by an ©
automobile. Mrs. Alpha Tinsley, 30, Muncie, died at the Huntington County Hospital from injuries received in an auto-truck coNision. In Indianapolis, Michael McCune, 38. of 337 N. Elder Ave, was hurt seriously when struck by a car as he walked into the 200 block N. Belmont Ave.
S Hurt Near
Near Brazil, Ind, nine persons were injured, two critically, in two anto crashes on Highway 40 vesterdav. Mrs Myrtle Skelton, suffered 2 crushed chest Harty IL. Feeven, 12 and Calvin Matthews, 17, both of Indianapolis beauty waz: in Serious gashes about throat and George Fagg. driver \ they which five All five oc car were inmachine was de-
Brasil
Brazil
operator
AnBitinn with =evere the ly when ideswiped persons cupants of
were the athe: nies
stroved by fire
and thelr
Six Injured as Cars Sideswipe in Ft. Wayne
FT. WAYNE, Ind. Sept. § (U. P.).—Three persons were seriously | hurt and three others were injured slightly when two cars sideswiped on Road 30 near here early today Police said those most seriously hurt were Ray Diehl, 30. Detroit; John Compton, 32, Detroit, and] Mrs. Janet Blanchard, 61, Terre! Haute, all occupants of a car returning from Terre Haute to Detroit. Robert Lumsdon, Warren Wirthers and Dick Trible, Brazil, Ind, youths who were riding in the second automobile, were treated for minor injuries
Bodies of Accident Victims Brought Home EVANSVILLE, Ind, Sept. 3 P)
yeeid
(U. ree Bvansville ents, fatally injured in an autoon at Robinson, I. Satbrought here todav. Meier. AR: FlizaDorothy Rose, 50
ARMY SAYS ‘LOST' PLANES ARE SAFE.
CRISTORAL, Canal U'. P).-—-Army authorities announced today thai three Army planes reported missing on a flight from Managua, Nicaragua, to the| Canal Zone were safe. The planes| had been reported down off the coast of Costa Rica. | The planes were among 33 Cur-| tiss fighters ordered to the Canal Zone to augment defenses.
CLOUDBURSTS TAKE TOLL LOS ANGELES. Sept. 5 (U. P.).—| Highway and rail crews removed | sand and boulders from roads and! railroads rights-of-way today after cloudbursts which delayed trains. | disrupted automobile traffic and left several families homeless on the desert 100 miles east of Los Angeles, No casualties were reported
The bodies of th
train enllizy urd were They were Herman
beth Rose RR. 2nd
| said,
Zone, Sept. §
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TLE ARGA AST le HL
EER dR
|chusetts,
A
S | At the
Times-Aemé Radiaphate,
Flashed fram Rerlin, yesterday, thie radio photo shawe a view af (he destruction and desolation wrought hy German hombe an a Pelich town, unidentified ac a result of censorship
Polish Skipper
OBOKEN, N. J, Sept. §
Nazi Blockade, Battle Subs
‘I'll Run "Em Down, , He Says, as Ship Docks in N, Y.; Mrs. Eddie Rickenbacker, Sons Aboard.
§ (U. P.).—The first Polish ship to dock here
Ready to Run
since war began raced into port today under command of a powerful six-foot Pole who vowed he would take his ship safely back to the
homeland and run down every path, Stamping across the bridge the Gdynia American liner Batory his words, Captain |
10 emphasize
Eustacy Borkowski said he was cer- |
tain he could find a way home de-
enemy
submarine that dared cross his
> STATE CORRECTS 118 PRISON SENTENCES
spite the German blockade, so that)
his 313 crew members could fight for their country. The RBatory, across the Atlantie to possible enemy pursuit, 12 passengers, of whom
which rig-magged throw off brought in 353 were Americans the New England coaxt from Halifax hr a Canadian submarine and a Canadian warship. I'm going hack if they instruct me to go” Capt. Rorkoawski said I'm willing and the crew it ready.
If submarines try to stop me I will
ram them with my bow. I will keep extraordinary watch with the crew and when we sight the submarine we will run them down.” & & @ WILL change quickly starboard
or whatever direction and with|
my bow at 20 knots speed I will scare them off. If they stay. I will ram them. I have done it before. Gentlemen, can you imagine 17,000 tons of ship and 3000 tons of passengers, oil and water ramming into a poor little submarine?’ He was asked what he would do if attacked by planes. “In the night time" he said, ‘they can't see me. In the daytime I turn myself like a pinwheel. 1
send all the passengers below decks)
and I stay on the bridge. I am not afraid to die. The only persons I fear are God and my wife” When the ship was just out of Copenhagen, Denmark, Capt. Rar. kowski said. # German communicatiene airplane flew over the ship and then disappeared over the horizen He flew zo low 1 though he might touch mv masts” Cap. Borkowski said. “But 1 didn't have any fear: as to what he would doa” Among the passengers were State Senator Chester Skibinski of Massareturning from a threeweek trip through Poland and Danzig. Mr. Skibinski said that Palith officials told him Hitler was faced
with a revolution because of the un- |
popularity of his move. He said Danzig was ® nervous place where people were
afraid to talk. They only spoke in;
whispers. So far as I could see, the Polish Army morale is far ahead of that of the German Army.”
1.80 on board was Mrs. Edward V. Rickenbacker, wife of the president of Eastern Airlines with her two sons, David, 14, and Wilfilam, 12. She said the trip was “dark most of the time ™ with all portholes covered. “They weren't allowed to tell us anything. although we knew we were not going in the right direction.” Two other passengers were Gen. Alexander Oesinski, former inspector general of the Polish Army and now president of the Polish Red Cross and Mme. Anna Paskowska, managing director of the Polish Red Cross, who are en route to Washington to confer with American Red Cross officials about the crisis, “As an old soldier.” Gen. Osinski “TI am sure that the Polish army will be victorious.”
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Sentences of 118 more prisoners in state institutions were ordered corrected today hy the State Clemency Commission, bringing the total number of erroneous terms adjusted to M4, Carrection of than 800 ‘sentences was: ordered hv Gavernor M. Clifford Townsend several weeks age on the advice of the Attorne: General's office that many judge: in the state have heen imposing sentences in some cases under the wrong law, The sentences corrected today were originally two to five vears and three to ten vears. The Commission ordered the terms made flat two and three years Of 35 petitions for parole, eight were granted by the commission. One Marion County prisoner was among those granted paroles. He is John Lewis, sentenced here five vears ago to a term of 15 years for robbery. He will be turned over to
more
Ohio authorities who want him for
jail break.
HOLIDAY TOLL 338, BELOW LAST YEAR'S
Rr UNITED PRESS The country’s week-end observance of Labor Day, overshadowed by events abroad, caused fewer deaths than it did during the haliday last vear a United Press survey showed today. Complete reports hy states listed at least 338 violent deaths as compared with almost 500 during the ‘three-day celebration last year Traffic accidents led all other causes with 214 death: Drowning: added 43. The death toll wa: highest in Minois, where 28 were killed on the highway: and 14 died from miscellaneous causes,
POLL SHOWS YOUTH WOULD DEFEND U. S.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5*(U. P). —The United States Junior Chamber of Commerce announced today that a poll of 3000 men between 20 and 30 vears old showed that 98 iper cent of them would fight to de‘fend the United States, but only 12 per cent would fight in defense of any democracy outside the Western Hemisphere. The poll was conducted by the magazine, “future.”
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PREDICT PEAK YEAR FOR YELLOWSTONE :
YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo, Sept. 4 (U. P.).—As| visitors flocked to Yellowstone National Park in ever increasing numbers, officials predict that the season's total will surpass the 500,000) mark for the first time despite competition from two world’s fairs,
Superintendent Edmund B. Rog-! that 276,385 persons] had viewed the park's scenic won-| ders up to July 31, a 106 per cent
ers reported
increase over the 249794 visitors for a like period in 1938. “Last vear we fell just a little short of the half-million mark," Rogers said. “With the percentage of increase over that figure—despite the San Francisco amd New York [airs—we should set an all-time) record.” Rail travel is the only figure that has dropped when compared with 1938 and 1037 travel figures, she superintendent reported. For the first. seven months, 9048 persons; visited the scenic park by rail, while | in the two previous seasons there were 0535 and 0004, _respeetiv ely.
Rank Goebbels With Criminals ONDON, Sept. 5 (U. P)— Following up {te imitation police circular of yesterday, “‘ad-
vertising” Adolf Hitler as “wanted” for murder, kidnaping,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
+ 16 ARE (ILLED Bombs Wreck Buildings in Polish ee BUILDING MILK Dogs Retrieve [Eeee™your FEAR at Home!
NATIONAL the Stuart Memorial
Mr. |
3 STRIKES 60 ON
schoo | Up; Dairy Drivers Hold $ Out for Closed Shop. E |
A labor dispute which has tied up | construction work on four schools (and three other buildings several days continued today with no im- | mediate prospects of settlement. same time, it was an{nounced that no steps have been taken toward settlement of the! |strike of some of the Polk Milk Co. | drivers which began Friday night, The construction tieup, affecting projects of the Service Construction | Go., began last Wednesday. At that | time, according to representatives of | the company, union carpenters ! walked off the job because other | crafts were installing aluminum trim
Construction Tied
i and sash at the Indiana State Board
of Health Building and the Flétchér Avenue Savings & Loan Building.
Union Denies Charge Representatives of the carpenters’ union denied that the tieup was a result of a jurisdictional dis- | pute, but declined to comment further for the present. | @G. F. Hoppe, executive secretary of the Building Contractors Asso-| ciation of Marion County, said the carpenters calle a secondary strike the Service Company's other | jobs Thursday. These included a | gymnasium at Howe High School, | Building at | Tech, and new Schools 60 and 91. | He said he had notified the presi{dent of the American Federation of | | Labor's Building and Construction | Trades Department of the situation | ‘and asked an immediate settlement. | Mr. Hoppe said that the depart-| ment, at its Atlantic City meeting recently, issued a general order that | in case of disputes between A. F. of L. crafts, work was to be continued | as it had been and the settlement | left up to the department's presi-| dent, J. P. Coyne, Deny Peace Overture { In the milk dispute, representa-| tives of both the Polk Milk Co. and of the Milk and Ice Cream Drivers Union denied that arrangements | had been made to meet for negotia[tions in the office of Mayor Sullivan. : | Company officials said there had heen no violence in the strike since | Saturday. Union officials denied thére had been anv violence on the ‘part of union members, | J Duane Dungan said the union's (only demand was for a closed shop, {and he added that the company declined to negotiate on this demand Estimates as to the number of men on sirike varied. Mr, Dungan said only about a dozen drivers reimalned on strike tody, with about | 380 other employees remaining on the job, Jacoh Weiss, the union's 'atorney, sald there were 56 drivers jon strike today.
arson and such crimes the Daily |
Mirror today published another concerning Paul Goebbels, Nazi propaganda minister. “Wanted—For poisoning the soul of mankind,” the circular was headed. Then came the description: “Black, lank hair, sallow complexion. Has a markedly nonbrachecephalic shaped skull | . | known as an associate of bad characters.” Another heading said Goebbels was wanted for homicide “against the youth of Europe,” and for blackmail.
PRINCESSES SEEK SAFETY LONDON, Sept. 5 (U.P) .—Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret have heen taken from Balmoral Castle, Scotland, to a “place of safety.” it was announced today, Ralmoral Castle has heen closed and arrangements are heing made to protect its furnishing: and ather valuables, the announcement zaid.
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