Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1940 — Page 30
nN SPEED DAVE g
Traffic Accidents Dron, Only Six Hurt; 99 Drivers Pay $250.
’ 4 i Re Working until late last night, po-
lice squads arrested 56 erring motor-
ists, including 29 on charges of] . speeding, in their “long range” traf-|
fic entorcement campaign. - . Accident Prevention authorities revealed that traffic misnaps dropped yesterday with only 14 reported. They attributed the declines directly to the police anti-speed efforts. Only six persons were injured.
- Yesterday the traffic courts im-
posed $250 in fines on 99 traffic vio-}
lators. The average fine was slightly more than $2.52. Fifty-three speeders paid $165. Only three were forced to pay court costs.
. Six persons were injured in a twocar crash at the Six Points Road and the Bradford Road, Hendricks County. They were James Miller, 54, Bridgeport, driver of one car, scalp wounds; his wife, Mrs. Martha Miller, 53, shock; Mrs. Sadie Hollingsworth, 57, 'of 523 Taft St., possible fractured leg; Mrs. Mary Hollingsworth, 27, of the Taft St. address, possible fractured pelvis, and her son, Billy, 5, scalp wounds. Mozie Simpson, 814 Engelmeyer St., who was riding in a car driven by Earl M. Gillaspy, 16, Maywood, Ind., received cuts.
NAMED AMO MUSIC DIRECTOR Henry O. Hebert, 1802 Orleans St., a graduate of Butler University and of the Jordan Conservatory of Music, has been appointed director of instrumeéntal music at the high school at Amo, Ind. .
find © | Times Photo:
These 12th District Legionnaires are ‘members: of the committee planning a fireworks display at the Fair Grounds on the evening of July 4. Left to right: Joseph, J. Sparks, James’ A. Alle, shaitwian,
and Frank L. Mumford.
VF. W. CHIEF WARNS
U, S. CLOSE TO WAR|
LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 28 (U. P.) —Otis N. Brown of Greensboro, N. C, for three terms commander= in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, told the 19th-annual Indiana encampment yesterday that the United States is dangerously close to war. “We know what war ‘is and we don’t want any more of it. ‘We are hot pacifists and we are ready to go again, if necessary. but this country is not prepared today and |. until it is, we have no right to send our youth off to war.”
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Matufates. School Outing “Selo The Indianapolis School of Maturates will have a picnic Monday at Garfield Park.
Doctors to Hear Professor—Indianapolis Medical Society members will be guests of the Indiana University School of Medicine tonight at a lecture by Di. M. Herbert Barker, of Northwestern University, in the . school auditorium.” Dr. Barker’s lecture will be the last of a series in connection with a week's postgraduate course in .heart disease for practicing Indiana physicians. Those taking the course will attend a dinner at the Indianapolis Athletic Club tonight preceding the lecture. a
‘Bankers Trust Outing Held—Officers and employees of the Bankers Trust Co. held an outing: ahd chicken dinner yesterday at Horuff’s
| mittee,
administrative staff ‘of the Indiana
LA civic citation was voted to Martin
1C. B. Hodges, 5th Corps command-
Brook View Inn. Barrett Kingman was chairman of the = bichie tom-
Nurse Honored—Miss ‘Jessie L. Groves, surgery supervisor at Robert W. Long Hospital, was to be honored for 256 years service to the nursing profession at a tea and reception this afternoon in the Ball Nursing Home. Attending ‘were to be members of the medical, nursing and
University Medical Center, students and alumni of the university school of nursing, and ofher friends. Miss Groves became night supervisor at Long Hospital in 1915.
League Gives Clinton Citation—
M. Clinton last night by the East Side Civic League. The League plans to confer similar citations each year for persons active in public affairs, music and Americanism. Mr. Clinton formerly was director of youth activities for the Indiana Council on International Relations. The award will be presented at a meeting Monday night.
Soldier to Get Medal—A Soldier's Medal will be presented to Private William L. Candler of the 11th Irfantry at Ft. Harrison tomorrow for attempting to rescue a fellow soldier from a flaming tent during recent maneuvers in the South.. The presentation will be made by Brig, Gen.
ing officer. The attempted rescue was made Jan. 17 at Camp - McClelland, Ala. The victim later
~ Tom Morris (left), is chairman and Edward J. is a member of the committee in charge of the annual si ing, dinner and entertainment to be given Monday at Kernel's Lake
by the St. Joan of Arc Men's Club.
Schwitzer-Cummings Picnic Set —Two thousand Schwitzer-Cum-
mings employees and their families will hold an all-day picnic tomorrow at Riverside Park. The outing will begin at 10 a. m. and will continue throughout the day with a program of contests. - Grover Smith is general chairman.
Club to Hear Rev. Elliott—The Rev. Errol T. Eiliott, pastor of the First Friends Church, was to speak on European conditions at the Exchange Club Luncheon in the Hotel Severin today. The Rev. Ellfott was sent abroad several months ago as a representative of the American Friends Setvice Committee.
Chidagoan to Speak—Lee Ragsdale, Chicago Rotarian, will speak| on “Give a Man a Horse He Can Ride” at the Rotary Club luncheon Tuesday at the Claypool Hotel.
Townsend Club 52 Meets—Townsend Club 52 will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the club rooms at 4424 W. Washington St. The club will hold a card party there at 8 p. m. Saturday.
Forestry Book Demand Large— The demand for Charles C. Deam’s new book “Flora in Indiana,” issued by the Forestry Division, has been unexpectedly large, Virgil M. Simmons, Conservation Department commissioner, said today. Mr. Simmons ‘said that he expected thesentire’ issue: of two thousand copies to be exhausted rapidly. Mr. Deam is State research forester.
Wesleyan Society Elects—Ralph Wright, 5202 Central Ave., has been elected president of the Ohio Wesleyan Society of Indiana. Mrs. Russel Benson, 428 W. 44th St. is the new ‘secretary and treasurer. The Society heard an address by Herman Shipps,- alumni secretary, on advancements at the university at a dinner Tuesday evening in the Fropylaeum.
Knight at Phi Kappa Psi Session —Corporation Counsel Edward H. Knight, who hasn't missed a na-| tional convention of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity since he was initiated in
Beach, N. J. attending the 41st biennial convention of the fraternity. William L. Taylor, N. E. Veneman and Robert W. Smith are also
died.
WASHINGTON, June 28 (U. P.). —The disillusionment of a welleducated American woman who regarded her husband as a ‘‘delightful, kind and gracious gentleman until she read in a newspaper that he was a Russian spy, was placed on District of Columbia: Federal Court records today in an unusual annulment suit. The complainant was Frances Dallant, 45, a ‘nurse employed by the Social Security Board and one time student at George Washington and Columbia Universities. . She sought annulment of her marriage to ‘Nicholas Dallant, alias Nicholas Dozenberg, now serving a sentence for espionage. She related how her romance blossomed in 1932 on the campus of George Washington University. The month after they met here eight years ago, Mrs. Dallant said] Dallant sailed for Europe. When] he returned, she was attending Co-
Wife Asks Freedom From Mate Revealed as Red Spy
attending from Indianapolis.
lumbia University and Dallant came to New York to be with her. In August, 1936, she followed him to Japan, where they were married. In: early 1937, the Dallants traveled through France, Austria, Czechoslovakia and Germany. During this tour, sne relaied, she was left alone in her hotel room for long periods. Uniformed - Russian officers were frequent callers. The European waiting and sightseeing tour ended in London. Mrs. Dallant sailed for America and Dallant went to Manila. | From then on she lived in fear, Mrs. Dallant related, and when she picked up a magazine carrying articles about Russia, she said, she read of a Mr. Dozenberg who seemed to be strangely familiar. Subsequently, she learned in a newspaper of the arrest of her husband in Oregon, where he masqueraded as a grocer, and of his admission that he was a Soviet secret agent.
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PENSION ROLLS INCREASE IN MAY
Old Age and Dependent Children Rolls Both Show Gains. -
Slight increases in the number of Hoosiers receiving old age assistance and aid to dependent ¢hildren from the State in May were reported by the Public Welfare Department today.
Old age rolls, which have c anged only slightly in. the last ‘nine months, rose one-tenth of 1 per cent to 65,930, still below the high point of 66,075 in January. Old age - assistance increased foyrtenths of 1 per cent to $1,173,390.45, an average of $17.80 a month for each recipient.
This average has been increasing slightly each month, and it now has passed the Michigan average of $16.90 'a month. Ohio with $23.24 and Illinois with $20.53 were above Indiana's average, but Kentucky's $8.60 is far below. * - Aid to dependent children was up eight-tenths of 1 per cent for May to a total of $485,106.25. This amount went to 35,540. children in 17,282 families. at an average of $28.09 per family. The number of families receiving aid was sixthtenths of 1 per cent more than in April and the average family payment was two-tenths of 1 per cen higher.
Aid to the blind was one-half of 1 per cent legs in May than in April, with 2433 blind persons receiving aid totaling $49,543. >
DUTY TO TAKE JUDGE TO BOYHOOD SCENE
Times Special BRAZIL, Ind., June 28.—A judge will walk the bank of a stream he fished as boy today to get firsthand information on an appraisement suit in Clay County Court. Judge John W. Baumunk will inspect the land along the Eel River after hearing testimony of landowners who object to the appraisement of the land for proposed improvements.
kc
‘H. ‘Hays, motion picture tsar,
C&L FLES "STATE PAPERS
will Hays Is Listed Among
“Incorporators of the ‘Dixie Line.’
Articles of incorporation for the |; Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Co., were filed in the Secretary of State's office yesterday, naming Will ‘as one of the incorporators. . The:incarporation of -the railroad, known as the: “Dixie Line,” was filed as_a step in the re-organiza-tion plan of the C. & E. I.—the first railroad reorganization to be carried out under Sec. 77-B of the
. | Federal Bankruptcy ‘Act.
According to the articles, presented by Hinkle C. Hays, brother of Will Hays, ‘the home office will be at Sullivan, hometown of the Hays ‘brothers, and their law firm Hays & ‘Hays. ‘The incorporation in Indiana had been previously approved by the Pederal District Court in Chicago and the Interstate Commerce Commission. The road was incorporated with 1,500,000 shares of stock. The value was not given. The Secretary of State’s office received a $15,000 fee through the action, one of she largest ever received. | The €. & E.. 1. has one of the fastest. Chicago-to-Florida passenger services through Indiana. The “Dixieland” ' maintains the fastest schedules ‘in the nation. The line is in a position to serve increasing industrial activity in the “pocket” area in southern Indiana by ifs strategic connection with east and
west trunk lines, according to com-
pany officials. Other incorporators were C. T. O’Neal, Chicago, president, of the new company, and Kenneth D. Steere, New York.
U. S. SUES FETCHIT OVER IMPORT DUTY
NEW YORK, June 28 (U. P.).— Stepin Fetchit, Negro comedian, was accused today by the Government of using three stooges in a new routine for evading payment of tariff duties. The Government asserted in an
action filed in Federal Court that Fetchit, while playing in Toronto
last January, had four suits made at $95 each He allegedly wore one when he crossed back into the United States —travelers are permitted to bring in
$100 worth of goods duty free. Three - of Fetchit’s friends—Barrie
O’Daniels, Jack McClendon and Benjamin Ashburn — also crossed
carrying $95 suits, it was charged.
Customs agents said they later found all four suits in Fetchit’s dressing room.
GOLD MINING CAMP ON UPGRADE AGAIN
~ TUCSON, Ariz, June 28 (U. P.).— Oatman, another Arizona Cold mining community which suffered a
slump after the boom days of the,
Sixties, is on the upgrade again, according to Elgin B. Holt, field en~ gine~r for the Arizona d: sartment of mineral resources.
The - camp, located about “0
miles from Kingman in northwest-[
ern Arizona, is experiencing a boom comparable to that in the town of of the state, which managed to escape the “ghost town” classification and once again is prospering, Mr.
: Holt said.
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Harness in Tribe
‘WABASH, Ind, June 28 (U. P). —TForest A. Harness of Kokomo; Repy lican © Congressman from ifth District, will become a Re Fn of the Miami Indiana . tribe at ceremonies here Sunday during the District Lincoln Club convention. Mr. Harness last year. introduced a bill to permit the tribe to goibefore the U. S. Court of Claims to seek to recover more than $1,000,000 which the Indians claim is due them on unpaid annuities. = No action. has been
neighborhood shelter were 66,003 hot* meals free durir past school year, a report, of | PF. Hayes, Wayne Township 1 tee, revealed today. “ To The meals were supplied in products of the township: truck | :
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