Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1940 — Page 3
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"Any Ci ity Can Is New Signal
Times Spéoiat Er EAST CHICAGO, Ind., April 5. —A motorist driving along Columbus- Drive blinked his eyes a couple of” ‘times ‘at a “Stop” sign ahead of hing. Unlike the standard type sign, this one read “Stop, Fire.” “It is a new form of sign installed to: warn motorists when fire frucks are approaching the. intersection. The word “Stop” burns constantly and the word “Fire” is lighted when the trucks 2PPleach the corner.
GERMAN NAVAL BASE BOMBED
Fighting Gains in West: Allies Also. Intensify Economic Warfare. (Continued from Page One)
EXTEND TRA PACT POWERS, | FD, R. URGES
Calls for Defeat of of Pian to Limit’ Extension as Sen-
ate’ ote Nears. |
| (Continued from Page One) of . ihe ext [Presidenti 1 ina ation: - vu
sTome HOURS SATURDAY, 9 A. mM. to 6 P. M.
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; and were vigorously attempting to . seize the -initiative from Adolf Hit! » ler by strong statements of cone RELIEF JURORS fidence and a furore of diplomatic ; Tr HEAR ANDERSON mercial schemes to out-bid and outpressure Germany in the Balkans’
Plans for mass production of merchant ships in Britain and comgrain, mineral and oil markets were Siegal and Ol) arutls wore Gro er. Denies Ever Filing
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Whether the Congress is} Samtrolien by Democrat licans, |
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1s the| desire of | 1n| ‘of us to dispose | of this bill Democratic Leader Alben Ww. | Barkley said. | Oppo rit of the bill agent with Mr. Barkley and Senatpr | Pat Har-
day, > Senate i
|ments as important phases of their
blockade network which now is being extended around the world and which, e ° Minister Neville Chamberlain hopes, will soon facilitate the Allied problem by impress-
False Claims; Kin Recalls ‘Mr. Tells.’
Continued from Page One)
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rison {D ing the neutral nations with the| heard of anyone by the name of | . (unfavorable prospects of the Ger-|Joseph Tells at that address. mans. 75 fie Trustee’s - investigators testified
‘Shipping Losses Decline for the State that they never had Alliel shipping losses in March is gaended relief for anyone by were described in London as the| On cross-examination, Mr. Lewis - {lowest since the outbreak of the|asked Mr. Lawhorn how Mr. Tells|’ war, with only 34 Allied and neu-|c2me to the store.
» 8 ” : SE “Some weeks he would drive and tral vessels being sunk by German ” . R AP S VIOLATORS sea and aerial attack or by Ger- Jone os he wouldi's, Mr. Law
man mines. The figure was lower “Describe the. car to the jury,
| than neutral - statistics compiled lease, Mr. Lewis said. A$ ANTI-SOCI AL outside Britain, but in any event Do aac he came in different 3 the last month saw a sharp de-|cars. One of them was a Ford. I
crease in the Nazi inroads on ship- | never paid much attention to the
: Times Photo. | Governor M. Clifford Townsend and Paul G. Hoffman, Studebaker Corp. presidept o o o study safety problems with toy autos.
= GIRL, 11, JAILED IN FOUR DEATHS
Police Believe She May Have Killed” Mother, Two ’ Sisters, Brother.
(Continued. from Page One)
-lto protect | agricultural es from tar Tate re-
WEARING TOPCO
that never
Alone for 3 Days, Indian Babe Lives
HOLBROOK, Ariz, April 5 (U. P.)—A baby weighing about 21 ounces and abandoned without food, wafer or care for three days after birth not only has survived - but is thriving, Dr. James F. Klock; physician at the hospital of the Hopi Indian Reservation, reported today. Dr. Klock said that the Hopi | Indians, like many primitive people, abandon babies which appear ‘to deviate from the normal. This baby, a girl, was born prematurely on Feb. 4. The parents left her in an abandoned pueblo on top of the great mesa at Oraibi, scene of the famous Hopi the fact that Chloe might have had snake dances Three days later, on Feb. 7, Dr. Klock found her. She responded quickly to careful nursing, he said,.and at the end of two weeks she was strong |. enough to use a nursing bottle. The babe now weighs three ® pounds and five ounces.
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other.” “How many times did he come to the store? Was it a half dozen times?” “It could be.”
ping. Parents Urged to Teach pogo ohase of ho conflict Ju
Children Value of Care |of, Narvik, where German and
(ori ships pave Been keding iron ore n reeent weeks. the British id. « - In Auto Driving. naval forces have crowded closer and |, Lewis then sald, “Mr. Law closer to the Norwegian coast to cut|20™, YOUTe a nephew of Mr. AnTraffic law violations should be 8 cub derson, aren't you?” : : : _P€loff the German ships and a United The witness replied. “Wouldn't discussed as anti-social acts just|Press correspondent inspecting ship- ou 3 lead not Pe for your the same as. other crimes, Paul|{ments at Narvik reported that Ger- yo : ot ally Jones, publicity director for the Na- re lvoring O29 rom Natvie “That's all,” Mr. Lewis said. tional Safety Council, said last! The survey ‘indicated that the No Change in Testimony night. ~ |British naval pressure had inter-| Paul Rochford, Mr. Anderson's He was addressing the Indiana oad yim ike Gorman shipments | attorney, asked Mr. Lawhorn if Js : s|irom Narvik but when the Gulf of|testimony to the jury was any - Safety [Council ‘and the CIOVeInor's Bothnia is free of ice within a|ferent than that given to Prose-Co-ordinating Safety Committee for short, time the ore can be shipped |cutor's investigators last fall. He Indiana at .a banquet and award|from Luleaa without fear of British said it was not. meeting in the Indianapolis Ath- attack. The detense opened its case.yesletic Club. Still another phase of the -eco-|terday and placed seven persons, inThe ceremonies and award pre- nomic struggle was reported by the|cluding clerks and delivery bays who sentations climaxed the traffic London Daily Mail, which ls that | worked for Mr. Anderson, on- the safety contest among cities and Allied experts were working out a|stand before recess in the afternoon. counties, sponsored by the state permanent. British-French partner-| The State closed its case in the safety council. ship that would create such a pow-| morning after presenting 24 persons
become ,involved in e fig Bt beh fear] the A. , of 1. apd § «2 C./ 1. O. ee 3 L. Lewis condemned the [Norton bill as ‘the “fruit of an unholy intrigue be- : Fl } ; tween anti-union manufacturers and |feeling, has great powers of imagi- + A. F. of E, ‘craft leaders blinded by (nation, for fantasy, and is distinctly ary an ry President | William capable of planning and committing Green previously had promised the|the ‘murders.. But so far, I believe amendments his Whole earted sup-|her story more than I disbelieve it. ; “We must take into consideration
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por Asks 5985.00, 000 for WPA em of the House Deficiency jan ‘Electra complex.’ She has read | Ap es subcommittee said|a great deal. She is a brilliant today that they| probably would ap-|scholar. Her mind is clear as a bell, proye any “reasonable” request by very quick.” President Roosevelt for] 1941 relief , Greek Myth Recalled funds. (The tragedy of Electra is reaffer Work {counted in Greek mythology. She drove her brother to take venge-
ance upon their. mother because aw she thought the ‘mother had not DEMOCRATS GAIN IN been faithful to their father. In .
Freudian psychology the term,
erful bloc after the war that mnoltc the jury. . ‘Governor Discusses Safety fiscal year. ° ‘Electra Complex,’ is used to describe | TEX AS JKL AHOMA it ‘Any ay Sar. ay 9 Irate Bi much more far reaching than is gen- | of Capt. Adam J. Wolf, superintend-} ~~. : } J erally believed, the correspondent|ent of the Salvation Army men’s | January budget es the other parent. : as the commission of any other| / military and economic force as|Mr. Wolf testified on cross-exami-home of her father, F. Barton Da-|Campaign.’ Indiana's safety program was L toe a] funds. Ironside Optimistic Now to give all the relief grocery busi-
1 Tote 1 y Y aggressor would dare challenge if. The afternoon court session yes- these are $25 C ats The British-French plans are|terday was highlighted by testimony That amount represented the|s nerson who 1s jealous of one par- ] { (figure Se; by Mr, vel in his lent for the love and attention of| (Continued from Page One) | CPS Seid: “Traffic violations should | S78, belleved, the corre planned | shelter at 308 W. Ohio St. did ta vhich All d ee be regarded as just as anti-social to weld the two empires into one| Although called by the defense, | Chloe was the only survivor of candidates which will be made ay on y the tragedy which occurred in the [Summer and on the course of the ig hey Sond le 50 Np, a stabilizing factor in jinternational|nation that he was Instructed by ry | 2 affairs after peace is restored. Mr. Quinn, when he was trustee, J i | ?» i ness at ‘the shelter to Mr. Anderson. Gen. Sir. ‘Edmund Ironside, chief| The shelter housed 210 homeless
vis, 51, a butcher. Police, respond- South stil Solid \ discussed by Governor M. Clifford ing to a call from a neighbor, went : Townsend and T. A. Dicus, State there yesterday and found Mrs.| As the Institute’s preview of the Highway Commission chairman.
Lolita Davis, 36, dead as the result (race continues, however, it appears|P G. Hoffman. t of the|Of the British imperial general staff, men who received $1.45 worth. of pp aul Corp P esiden of ne said at.a press conference today that groceries each week, paid for by the
’ Pp. 5 (U. P) h— of hea ; vy blows and burns, Mark; Studebaker , Pr opagaikla avi an Joreian dead of a crushed skull, and thal he Peinasatie peed will gr Traffic Safety . Council and the Britain was now fully prepared for |trustee and furnished by Anderson eranoee stireed Senate loaders to. [Daphne and Ann ‘dying of identical more be. Sunk € heavily upon the, ye motive Safety Foundation of ah attack although she was com-|grocery, he said. - 2 datos . terances Iv investiga. | €ad wounds. “Solid: South while attempting tothe United States, introduced the|P etely unprepared when war began.| From the clerk's an ry day to press for al ear. F yes g Child’s. ; {rally its strength with voters in the speakers. Thank goodness that Germany|boys’ testimony which concerned tion of propagan an ac- hoo i i n dustrial ‘North and the far ming| Mr. Hoffman presented trophies did not attack Us during the first| procedure for filling relief grocery s story was: Wes to winning cities and counties in [SéVen months,” he said.
Story
orders at the: and by truck, Me L
tivities of foreign | agents in this country. Senator James F. Byrnes (D. S. C.), chairman of a committee controlling Senate funds, said he would call .& meeting soon to consider a resolution sponsored by Senator Bennett C. Clark (D. Mo.) proposing a ‘Senate investigation of foreign Bl probaganda, Clark said his proposed inBl was designed to find out . whether foreign agents have sought to influence public opinion in this country in favor of one or the other side in the European war.
SUIT SEEKS TO HALT SALE FOR BACK TAX|
A suit on file in Su erior Court 1 today seeks to halt the sale of tax’ as property scheduled to start Monday. It was filed- by Mr. and. Mrs; John A. Kirkpatrick yesterday| and names County Treasury Walter, C. Boetcher and C County Auditor Glenn 2 Ralston defendants. The suit alloges the 1919 tax sale law is unconstitutional and that there is a similar suit. pending in the Boone, Circuit Court, Postpone | ment of the sale until the Indiana urt has ruled on the constitutionality of the law is asked.
Her mother and her sisters atid brothers were all still in bed when her father went to (work. Her mother then got up and began dressing. Meanwhile the older girls had taken Mark from his bed and Mark and Ann were inthe kitchen. Her mcether appeared, partly dressed in the kitchen, grabbed! up the claw hammer and beat Mark and Ann on the head. She went to the bathroom and found Daphne in the tub. With ‘a few blows she! crushed her skull | and Daphne collapsed face down in the water. | Chloe heard a disturbance, and, in ‘Pajamas, ran into the hallway where she met her mother. Her mother swung at her with the ham- | mer but she moved -and the hammer i grazed her head. rs. Davis then handed her the a] er and ordered her to help drag a mattress into the hall. Mrs. Davis lay on the mattress, set fire to her hair and night dress and shouted at Chloe to beat her until she breathed no more,
| Hits Mother 20 Times
Chloe started to beat her on the head with the hammer. She hit her again and again—perhaps 20 times. After a while, she was thirsty and went to the kitchen for water. Mark was still alive, moaning. She
te tests thus far in eight Northern and Western states— Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Iowa, Minnesota and California— show drops in Democratic strength since 1936 ranging from’ 7 to| 16 points. While the Democrats are ahead in the most populous of these states, their lead at the present time is far from secure. The above figures for Texas and Oklahoma are, of course, measurements of basie-party strength and have nothing to do with the demand for a tltird term.
Third Term Has Backers
To see how these Southern voters regard a third-term at the present time, the - Institute asked: “If President Roosevelt runs for a third term will you vote for. him?” Even though Texas is the home state of Vice President Garner, himself a canadidate for the Democratic nomination, 72 per cent said they’ would vote for Mr. Roosevelt if he runs for a third term. Oklahomans, considerably cooler, were only 49 per cent for a third term.
ARBITRATE OIL FUSS,
the safety contest. Accepting for} the cities were Mayor William Dress, Evansville; Mayor Jesse I. Pavey, South Bend; Mayor Harry Baldwin, Anderson; Mayor Harold Freeland, Kokomo, and Mayor Russell Leonard, Logansport.
Putnam Post ‘Wins ‘
Accepting for the counties. were Sheriff Benjamin Teegarden, Union County; Sheriff Walter Felger, Allen County; Sheriff Elmer Nolting, Bartholomew; Sheriff Russel Jones, Crawford County, and Vaughn Crowe, Wells County roads superintendent. Putnam Post won the State Police Award, presented by Lieut. Col. Claud Crooks, State Police Board president. Post: members honored were Lieut. Don Franklin, Sergt. Frank Gray, Sergt. James Walls and Corp. Verl Clark,
Only Three Injured In Overnight Traffic
Only three persons were injured in overnight traffic in ‘the City, as police began to crack down on speeders and reckless drivers. [Police yesterday started issuing warning stickers to. motorists found
NAZIS CLAIM FRENCH WANT T0 SLICE REICH
(Continued from Page One)
became Premier, M. Robinet said, the map was an ordinary one of Europe drafted before Germany seized’ Austria. Some retoucher inaccurately inserted 15 frontier lines for all of Europe, M. Robinet said, making Germany appear to have absorbed Denmark and Luxembourg, moving the Adriatic. Sea inland almost as far as the Brenner Pass and! giving Austria a sea. front on the Adriatic. Premier Reynaud today opened his office. to newspapermen for study of the now famous map. It appeared to them to be an ordinary map of Europe, dated 1919, on which were M. Reynaud’s handdrawn lines in red ink showing the German absorption of Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Memel.
‘Fantastic Nonsense,’
Welles Declares WASHINGTON, April 5 (U. P.) —
Rochford attempted to show the| jury that the alleged false clafimin the name of a purported relief client “M. Woodson” was not false, that some persons who represented “M. Woodson” could have signed | the claim.
former delivery boy and. clerk for the Anderson grocery, testified that when filling relief orders over | the counter or at the reliefer’s home he demanded the relief card idntification before handing over the food-
stuff.
the orders were not delivered or filled and that in such cases clerks would hold the groceries for 24 hours. that time the trustee’s order would be turned over to Mr. Anderson and sent back to the trustee.
asked: ders over to Anderson?”
them wasn’t it?” | asked.
Delivery Boy Testifies Stanley Torrent, 1027 N. Rural St.,
He said there were times When "If the clients didn’t come in
On cross-examination, Mr. Lewis “You turned the unfilled or-
“Yes,” Mr. Torrent said. “And that is the last you saw of the prosecutor “Yes,” Mr. Torrent replied. State Charges False Names The clerks and delivery boys said
nd you can be ited —right! Comfortably, smartj—in the best taste of te season (and next). Varied in fabric, tye and
details — but no vation in the
Mr. and Mrs. Kirkpatrick speci: |asked her mother if ‘she shouldn’t | fically mention a piece of property |put Mark out of his misery and her at 822. ‘E.| 23d St. They maintain | mother nodded.
HULL URGES MEXICO |“jichty exceeding” the speed limits undersecretary ot Sato Sumer 4% COU, not, remember having 0 miles an hour in the Mile| Welles last night described as “fan- 00ds0. “Sp 1 went back and hit him| WASHINGTON, April 5 (U. Pp.).|Square and 30 miles in all other sec- tastic nonsense” reports that French fhe amen W hy Tells) Searcy |luntil he was still.” —Secretary of State Cordell Hull[tions. Arrests were being made for| Premier Paul Reynaud had traced These were the names of alleged Returning, she resumed "beating revealed today that he has proposed|gross violations. on a map for him the secret, Post-| relief clients which the State her mother. to Mexico that the controversy over| Starting Monday, motorcycle pa-|war aims of the Allies. charges were not filled. The State the expropriation of American ojl|trolmen have orders to bear down| In a formal statement, Mr. Welles | charges such persons as named on properties be submitted to arbitra-|On motorists end to make arrests|said- the ns i do not exist. tion. sicker of issuing ‘the warning| «various allegations concerning a Miss Hanna Noone, County ReCam Medien | {ah "ol Reva wn ot vs Sa 5, emer Cester Tovah . j S e defen OFFICIAL WE ATHER | At the Sime time, Chief Michael ae fangstic } Nonsense i ime began doing relief business 8 the : imty Ly F. Morrissey anounced that atci- g the y I'View beginning of her administration in By U. S. Weather Bureau dent prevention cars have been re-|in Paris or in any other capital I|1931,
essential goodness of a Wearington— front which stems this fact— “You'll be better sats with a Veg”
| BIRTHS Girls | DEATHS TO DATE Oscar, Effie Jackson, at c chy | Donald, Helen Harwood, at St. Vincent’s. | Thomas, "Jane Mahaffey, at St. Vincent's.
{ BAROMETER TODAY
NAS mth es ns
Totals ik. 21
Exchange Club, Hotel Severin, noon. Optimist Club, [Columbia Club, noor.
, Canary Cottage noon. Columbia Club. noon otel Antlers,” 8
‘Albert Westerfield, 30, Several others were injured in were housed, to the center of: the
vi North - lrvinzton Civic | League, 987 | N.|lobar ‘pneumonia. Hel td To accidents outside ‘the City. Two -Doushka was priceless; the hand- arena, Indo chose the moment to
Dy een dl] 8 3| Donald, Mary Poehler: a St. Vincente. times | OLIS FORECAST — Fair and tories, Two regular squad cars will|any maps. I never even looked at|dilizentls, Silent odor ps Vays | reezing. | (George, Margaret Romer, at St. Vin- 5:22 | Sunset perform prevention work along with Dead 08000000 0 Accidents ecee Flares and playing in the street and to force SINS =F Ere ; Daniel, Beatrice Geller, at St. Vincent's R [ K | [ . ried | toms Precipitation 24 hrs. endin, 5 3 a. Were renewed today after {wo in Iva I 3 Speeding ....... George, Lucile Jones, pe Met, Body m. : : Twelve-year-old William Martin, — - Reus : ploast Hiss Jolin 3v nil fevad a WEATHER outburst of jungle passion--jealousy,/ months, and had never been friend DAL devine Leonhrd, Dolores Keeler, at City. Illinois—Generally fair | and continued| Co. 25 Ne made a left turn on his |g, Doushka, the only Siberian snowing for a 28-day run at Madison 's. | toni Sherman E. Wright, 70, of 310 E|hearsal, and threw a pall of mourn-|taut throughout the court menagerie A DEATHS ° “Ohia_ruir, continued cool tonight and| mouth St., received an arm fracture |t098y. bars of* his cage, clawed away the myocarditi -Kentueky—Generally: darted to a short-lived freedom in Tijan Indo, an Indian leopard. Trade, noon. Dofid Ents, 8 ma. at Riley, menin-| WEATHER IN OTHER GIFIES, 6:00 A. ‘|and the animal from the hot-blood-|1500 property men, tumblers, trapeze we] JUNIOR CHARGE | ACEOONT, Indiana Stamp Club Be ; "Charles Ernest, 67, af Long, uremia, | Shices 1 Clear - 36. cally when he was thrown {rom the |tendants had to pry his mouth open| Mr: Court was starting his charges Indiana State Federa tion of Public Margaret Winters,’ 80, at 1339 Broadway, (Mo Carrying Charges) Balcony. Little Rock, out’ ¢ A: Ar. injured slightly in a collision on |featured performer of Alfred Court’s| A circus physician reached the
Pl May Posner B's Vincent's | teeny hed cool tonight and tomorfows| be manned by officers trained in|any map which may have been in|ried on his relief business in a —April 4— Sunrise Bernard, Thelma Harmon, at St. Vin- TEMPERATURE their regular duties. THUR. AFFIC COURT SDAY TR Raymond, Harriett Staab, at St. Vin- o . Clark, Mary Taylor, at St. Vincent's. P r I Ze of Ci r Cu S 3 ‘ ey : Total uries in which bicycles were in- . r : ‘ / — Fatture to siop at George Tele once at MEO | ERP RR ] y If you have other deans pressing Backless Sriving. | | Hai Indisna—Generally fair and continued [2027 N Delaware St. was cut and perhaps, over the starring role in|ly during their long European tour. Ora, Mable Allen, at City cool tonight and tomorrow, except some-|PiC¥cle in the 2100 block, N. Dela- leopard in captivity, in dress re-|Square Garden, nerves had been All others «..... in CHARGE ACCOUNT Lower Michigan—Fair and continued cool 23d St.- ing over the opening of Ringling|of tigers, lions, leopards and jaugars, z Mar} Kirschner, 7%, at Central 1Ind.,|tomorrow tora: and vesterday ‘when he was struck by a Doushka was killed by his whder cloth netting covering the top and Willia am “Robertson, 13, at City, lobar tomorrow; slightly cooler tonight. 8 bicycle at Michigan and Rural Sts. study, the arena, stampeding a crowd of gococcio mening Stati 3 . Phi Delta The Ella York, 18, at Olty, illo. "Cloudy 3034 "48" | Charles Goodrich, 56, of 1861 ed clime had his jaws clamped on |8rtiSts, equestrians and freaks. : 5 tates Nation ht Tennis Samuel Brown, 69, at 1412 Lawton, care hed of a truck ‘at 52d St. and |with iron bars, Doushka was stran- into the caged runway leading from to special teed school "Teachers. Claypoa! Hotel. chronjc myocarditis i Lafayette lis. animal act. is fur was white with scene quickly, summoned veterinari- Sn : Ls ' . | y
= | peritonit ‘MEETINGS TOMORROW U. 8. National Table Tennis Championua T Hall. 8:58 A. M.+-4526 |21st, oline - st py Danson. aaa Claypool |e explosion, 3 et b oe : $e iE 0 a. Ss BS Sipeesanis Union, Claypool | mobile $20 gl SNISy.yania, suto. sbiirgh
¥ 11:1 : - Hotel, ‘noo i sienaimen, Clay xii 18 A M.—Canal and W. 23d, un
t 1:46 P, —— es ozs el, Bu os, Ca Washin gon, ae M.—1006 W. Pearl, sparks from 3:51 P. M.—-731 W. Hemzy, unknown.
districted to provide smaller terri-|visited was any reference made to] She said ‘Anderson had always 1939 esssiesssssses 9 goin, Myrtle Williams, at St. Vincent's. o Stuart, Et 0. Hicent s © rds tonight and lowest Semperaure about), vident prevention ‘work and will|M. Reynaud’s office.” proper manner. Injured cesses 8 Arrests escsee ‘ : ® : ey Orders issued several days ago for J | # Louis, Evangeline Shepherd, at St. Vin- April 5, 1939— police to prevent children from u n g e assi on ases Convic- Fini Violations Cases Qoltvie 08 | eens SW i caution on the part of nicyclists 4 | Volney, Myrtle Wilson, at Methodist, | aris. = |Deficiency since Jan volved. NEW YORK, A : ad y 7 , April 5 (U. P).—An| They had been wa, a feud for through street. 2 | | hae y ers i signal ....... 3 Harold, Martha Mason. at Coleman, | heavy drost tonight, 0" [60 to locally bruised when he was struck bY 3.|(neir American debut—cost the life| Yesterday, on the eve pf sacs oman: on your pur Se—Gonsl er A John, Helen Mosier. at Si. Vincent's. That Innsettied in extreme south portion|ware St. The ‘car was driven by tonight and tomorrow; Sunday fair and Charles ers. 2, of 2436 Ply- Brothers-Barnum & Bailey's Circus|and one leopard. had climbed the — cstnary 30 doy account. Reserve Officers’ Association. Board 'of| "Sg Thrown from Truck -| There was a lunge, quick as a blink, il Pella Theta, cerebralhemor- | Ama rifle, Tex. Prdiana it Paviou, 42 at City, diabetes|n Belicfontaine St., was injured criti- (his northern cousin’s throat. At-|,, nen, at rehearsal time, just as A { i grits [Fauraamen!, . 'Tomiingon/ emom at Methodist, Boulevard Place. gled. the hockey team office where they * Arlinwton Ave. night. Louise Garber, 46, ‘at 949 Elm, uremia. diana |somest animal in the circus, the settle accounts with Doushka. tate Hi-Y Council, Hotel Antlers, ali Marion Fakes, 18, at Methodist, general In University students were 3csoun : Road near Indianapo
They were Miss Vera Crook, 21, black spots. He could walk a nar-ans and hospital equipment. Dr. South Bend, and Arthur Grimm, 22. |TOW, iron high bar, leap 14 feet from Leon Roth rushed there from Poly- |. LaFontaine, Ind. They were taken|one pedestal to another, and as a|clinic Hospital with oxygen tanks. to Methodist Hospital, climax to his act, permitted his|Adrenalin was injected into Doush- ' Mrs. Ruth Miers, 44 44, Greensburg, trainer to wrap him around his s.neck ka’s heart, oxygen poured into his Ind., was injured slightly in a two-|like a fur piece. lungs, and although he rallied for a car crash on §t. Road 29 near| Indo was learning to do these time, he died from-shock after four Hmeggon Ave. things, but Bot too well, *hours of frenzied medinal treatment,
FIRE ALARMS | THURSDAY
rrr . Cloudy ortland, Ore. . ...
