Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1940 — Page 20

PAGE 18

LONG INDICTED ' Airport's Fire Department LITTLE SCOPES’ |

ON TWO COUNTS

Ex-Governor of Louisiana. Four Others Accused of Theft and Extortion.

NEW ORLEANS. Jul 24 U Former Earl Tong, who once boasted that

P) Goveruot Kemp

litical record m scandal-swept Loy Was Clean. was \ today The New Ovlean:

ana Jury charged him

isiana meat G embezzlement effort 1A perpet va his late Long The

fom

y =n

Bret he

Grand nn

Orlean

forme: (New od 16 can persons drawing MNg-—on the pay poses. The hundreds of ONE Orleans docks, wha) Shipp 1 000.000 Th

occur

Pa rsels Faris

conEni

we a A SQ es

1ACiil VAR ea

campaigning Govern feated en Long Ciovernor caug i cleanup. Former Governo WwW. years

he

m

eX If unde: Federal 1 aun naicted with Long ager of the Dock Road Herbert Rennyson, ail members of whlch

stration

Care BYWarts

rerved aurn Each chargmng

oe charging #Xto

SALE ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT

g Long's [Aas Named in cm has samen

counts

RIL RE

The “F. bh"

on this truek means five department

~and that is just

what this track isthe entire present five “depaviment” of the Mu-

U's a model “7 bX (Nish)

nicipal Airport of Bright red paint

of a piece of squinment, went to wou

he handsome, hut, by gosh, it rans!

NLRB IS UPHELD IN DETERMINING AGENT

LOUIS, July 24 (U.P National Tabor Relations Board he aut determine wha tes a { gaining

ST he nority to legal according the United States Appeals O. Faderation America was agent for prox oe Workers im a ttshurgh Plate

consul collecting ba Nid jon

count

of of in which the Flat Glass mage

of ae of

famine

A ppeal lad aed ast Septembm } miendea that the NLRI anthority when union, having a

Ave of

stepped that (he workers in

of he six

could represent the emplove the Crystal City, Mo. plant the union wag in the minority

With its face lifted and a nice coal Dienhart, unable (0 (alk the city ont

k creating this truck. Tt may not

18-Year-Old Girl Saves Wader, 13

U. P)

8-vear-olq

24 an

DETROIT Quick action Alabama

July by ereqited with Donald Uller, who wag stricken with cramps

girl was

saving the life

of

ya

while wading in the Detroit River VOSS

erqay

The bov was pulled hom the ter, but nane present conld ofibhets of ana apWhen Don ready to membey the

undaoubt «

until Jeanette stepped forwarg respiration we workers arrivea ana

artificial

Ble Nag 20 back to play A cue dl Knowledge of frst edly saved life

conseions of We IRs

a au

saia aid

Ir 8

his

(military

JURY SENT HOME

Unable to Reach Verdict on Morality of Books Under Fire.

PORTLAND, Ind, July 24 (U. P ). | 10!

A Jay Circuit Court jury of men and two women today had been discharged by Moran after reporting unable to reach a little Scopes”

Judge James J that it veraiet in the filed by Walter Phinney against the Redkev School Board My, Phinney, asked to resign as a teacher In the Redkevy High School in 1938 because he allegedly sponsored instruction from immoral books, had asked for reinstatement as a teacher and $1000 as indemnity It was reported that the jury stood 9 to 3 in favor of the school board at the time that it returned 10 the courtroom. Earlier the vote had at one point been 10 to 2 in favor of the school board it was said. Clarence A. Benadum of Mr, Phinney's attorne ae expected to try the in September, Mr. Benadum had sought to prove that books utilized by Mr. Phinney were not immoral. Principal books questioned by the school board were Stars Fell on Alabama” and “A New American Histon

was

suit

Muncie that agam

said

case

JERSEY MEN MOBILIZED TRENTON. N. J. July 24 (U, P) Governor A. Harry Moore vestey. dav announced plans mobiliza tion of all New Jersey men tween the ages of 18 21 45 and 685 inte a home guard in anti cipation of a national compuisor) training law

{on be

and and

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1940

I's Tired, Too LEXINGTON AVE, Vincennes ‘Fresh Air Hotel

This ix a note te southbound motorists on Capitol Ave, The street department didn’t put the sign up at 10th St this wave-it fell that way. It's heen that way now for months, We finally got tired of seeing it that wav, This will fix it, Just wait and see,

Y! LAST 4 DAYS OF SALE!

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| id 3:4]:18

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le le le le le le le le

ALL OTHER SIZES AT SIMILAR SAVINGS

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CARS DEFENDED

So Many Oppose Abandonment That Examiner Just Takes Names.

VINCENNES, Ind. July 24 (U.) P.) —Vincennes may lose its 10-year-old “Fresh Air” hotel in trade for one in which guests can actually

| be accommodated,

The structure, nicknamed the “Fresh Air” hotel because it boasts only a steel framework and lacks

The folks out Lexington Ave. way floors, beds, bellhops or room clerks,

don't want their streetcar abandoned,

many)

just

So of them said so at a

hearing on a petition for abandon-|

the State House vesterday that Examiner Ray Gilpert ordered that testimony be stopped and told the clerk to take names and addresses of those who felt that wav about it. The clerk wrote down more than a dog-

ment of the line at

the

én names, The sentiments of the large group of Lexington Ave, residents who attended the two-day hearing in the House of Representatives Chamber were expressed by Harry E. Royse, 911 Dawson St. Fears Inconvenience Mr. Rovse testified that removal of the line would cause a great incon-

venience to residents of the avea,

iine | was |ago.

|

than a decade Construction stopped at the halfway mark when the 1929 depression struck.

The building.

started more

eight stories high,

goes on the auction block Saturday

May Become Real Hostelry

and negotiations are under wav for the prospective purchaser to come plete the structure for a hotel The auction follows a bankruptey action against the Ft Sackville Realty Co., an organization of cCitie zens handling the construction. Sale of the steel framework, the come pany’s only assets, was ordered to satisfy a judgment of $89,529.37 for the Vincennes Steel Cory.

There were 12,505 certificated aire craft April 1, 1940, as come vared to 10,698 for April 1, 1939

as ol

0 ©

forcing them to walk from one to|

four blocks farther than they now have to walk to use either the Prospect St. or English Ave, trackless trollevs, He declared they would be furher inconvenienced by being forced o board busses now already loaded 0 capacity Al night, the residents would be forced to walk some distance ovel poorlv-lighted streets, he asserted and abandonment of the line would bring about a great depreciation in the value of the real estate in the area, | Asks for Improvements

He contended that the line should be improved and that it made no material difference whether the line operated at a profit or a loss as long as the entire Indianapolis railway system showed a profit, Residents who gave corroborating testimony included Miss Margaret MeFarland, 1434 Pleasant St; Mrs, Marie Matthews, 1419 Lexington Ave.. Mrs Mattie Lyster, 1631 dleasant St; Charles Robey, 1409 Lexington Ave: Mrs. Rovse; Miss Zada and Miss Lillian Bird, 1806 Lexington Ave: Ernest R. Long, 1937 Hovt Avi: S. H. Blank. 1001 Lexington Ave; Mrs. Mabel Sharp. 1296 Lexington Ave... Mrs. Anabelle Clem, 1808 Hevt Ave. Mrs, George Huhbard, 1119 Lexington Ave; B. H Facemire, 1548 Lexington Ave, and Mrs. Anna Pape, 2105 Lexington Ave Earlier, Indi»napolis Ine. officials, testified the operating at a loss and the company could nnt afford te repair it They contended that the nearby trolleve offered residents of the area proper transportation Examiner Gilbert said he would study the testimony and prepare a report for the Public Service Commission soon He said a ruling might be expected within the next six weeks,

Railways, line was

DEATH OF PLAYER SADDENS TOSCANINI

NEW YORK “YS U.P Arturo Toscanini, saddened by the

July

100 members ol Orchestra

death of one of the

the NRC which he conducted during a of South America, remained cluded in his staternom when he arrived ahoard the steamship Uruguay vesterday Mr. Toscanini had not been informed of (he death of Jacques Tuchinsky, a viola player, until yesterday. Mr, Tuchinsky was Killed by a motor bus in Rio de Janeiro July 10, just before the last concert of the tour, and Mr, Toscanini did not notice his absence. The maestro burst into tears when informed of Mr. Tuchinsky's death, other members of the orchestra said, and had seen no one since he received the news until Mrs. David Sarnoff, wife of the chairman of the board of NBC, boarded the ship The members of the orchestra related today the urgent summons all received to appear for rehearsal in Montevideo, Uruguay When the orchestra was ready Toscanini addressed them thus “You are from the Uniled States. It is the Fourth of July, and I think this 1s »n occasion that should be celebrated. I call vou together only to play “The Star-Spangled Banner.” And the orchestra plaved with no one in the vast music hall except one person, an attache of the American Consulate,

ANNENBERG BEGINS PENITENTIARY TERM

LEWISBURG, Pa. July 24 (U.P.). M. L. Annenberg, Philadelphia publisher and once top figure in the nation-wide race news business, today began a three-year term in Northeastern Federal Prison for Federal tax violations. The publisher arrived here late last night after a 720-mile automobile trip from Chicago. He was to be given a medical examination, don prison garb and start the usual 30day quarantine before being assigned his institution duties. In a farewell annoucement in his Philadelphia Inquirer vesterday, Annenberg denied his guilt and said he never “had the slightest intention of defrauding the Government.” A group of reporters watched the penitentiary’s main gate, but Annenberg was smuggled into the institution by a rear entrance. | Warden William H. Hiatt em-| 'phasized that Annenberg would be given the same treatment as other prisoners and that he did not expect to see him until he was assigned a routine prison task at the end of the quarantine,

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A AA Sr | | |

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Mr.

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\

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gman’ dy

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