Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1940 — Page 7
~~ CITY'S TOLL 54
Sister Florence Marie Is.
%
THURSDAY, AUG. 20,
"AUTO INJURIES
FATAL TO NUN,
Accident Victim: Man Hurt Week Ago Dies.
_ Two persons died today of inJuries received in Indianapolis traffic within the last week, sending the city's 1940 traffic toll to 54. Sister Florence Marie, a Sister of Providence temporarily
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|
Dirt Turned for
New Aviation School
0 PRAGA 5 SSIES a
HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES |
2 MORE POLIO GASES IN CITY
Girl, 10, and Boy, 6, Are Latest to Be Stricken; State’s Death Toll 20.
Two more cases of infantile paralysis were admitted overnight
No Nation Safe, Hull Warns ~ On Kellogg Pact Anniversary
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (U. P.).!the normal state of the world and —Only by vigorous and adequate mankind fs to relapse into the chaos preparation for self-defense can the| barbarism.” (United States hope to remain at ln peace, Secretary of State Cordell | Hull reviewed the treaty, which in Hull said today in a statement on| Article 1 renounced war as an inthe 12th anniversary of the Kellogg- |strument of national policy in interBriand Pact which Was designed t national relations. In Article 2, the
. parties agreed that “the settlement He declared that the pact's under-|or solution of all disputes or con-
PAGE 7’
OFFICER DOZES, PRISONER FLEES
Gem Theft Suspect Escapes From Train En Route To Indianapolis.
Simon Weimer, who was being ree turned here to face grand larceny
to Indiana University hospitals here,
One victim 1s a 10-year-old girl from Andrews, Huntington County, and the other a 8-year-old boy from Rushville, Patients in University hospitals now total 68, of whom 19
bringing the state-wide total to 215. |
lying principles remain valid, but that “today no country and no in(dividual fis secure against the destructive effects of the existing armed conflicts.”
these principles into effect, he said, Irests the fate of civilization.
Upon mankind's ability to bring
flicts of whatever nature or of whatbe a ye ely M0 | Syracuse, N.Y. yesterday when an fsought except by pacific means.” Indianapolis officer went to sleep, | “In recent years,” Hull said, “the police revealed last night. {renunciation made in Article 1 of | Weimer, arrested at Mineola, L.T, the Kellogg-Briand Pact has been|i, sonnection with the theft of dine
charges, escaped from a train near
attached ’ onto ai (he. rote ven na. MONS valusd at $5000 from he Rel [ticle 2 of that treaty has been vio-|Co., Inc, wholesale jewelers here, {lated by those signatories. . . . |was in charge of Charles E. Bauer, “Today no country and no indi-|investigator, [vidual is secure against the destruc-| Weimer was handcuffed to the | “The soundness oI {ts underlying tive effects of the existing armed bed rail in an upper berth and InTwo additional deaths were re- principles has in no way been im- conflicts. No human being anywhere |vestigator Bauer sat in the lower ported in the state to bring the paired by what has taken place since /can be sure that he or she will be berth to keep guard, but went to toll to 20. Horace Ransdell, 22, |then. [allowed for long to live in peace.|sleep, he told Chief of Detectives Muncie, a Y. M. C. A. worker, dted “Sooner or later they must prevail Only by vigorous and adequate Fred Simon in the Ball State Hospital there.{as an unshakable foundation of in- preparation for self-defense can any| When he awakened the bed rail Marie Hammond, 2, died in alternational relations unless war with country, including our own, hope to|was disconnected and his prisoner respirator in Mishawaka, 'its horrors and ravages is to become 'remain at peace.” "was gone
are convalescent and the others in acute stages.
In La Porte, another case was reported today. A 99-year-old girl was]
[nessing stricken. The County now has a : g ” i 3 - V } 7 - - , ~ © total ‘Of Six Cases. (Briand Pact was signed,” he said
to St. Agnes Academy here, died in| St. Vincent's Hospital. | ~ She and another nun were in-| Jured Tuesday when the car in| which they were riding and a truck collided at 26th and Illinois Sts. She was en route to the hospital at the time for a medical treatment. Also Injured was Sister Marie Frances. The victim was a native of Chi- | cago and had been in Indianapolis for two weeks. The car was driven | * "by Miss Edna Hickey, 27, of 930 N. | Dearborn St. The truck was driven | by Ligget Alder, 31, of 324 Forest Ave, ; Harry J. Woods, 44, Seminole 3 Hotel, died in City Hospital of in- : Juries received a week ago when his ‘auto and a bus collided at Highland Ave. and Market St. | «' Mr. Woods received a fractured, > skull. Police have notified his wife, | 3 Who lives in Brockton, Mass. § Jerry Clark, 6, was injured last hight when he ran into the street “in front of his home, 1128 St. Paul] Bt, and was struck by a car. He| ds in St. Francis Hospital in fair eondition. Elmer C. Gonder, 34, of 1034 Summer St., a mail carrier, was struck By a car in the 2600 block of Shelby Bt. yesterday and injured. He is in| 3 Vincent's Hospital in fair condi“ion.
Girl Killed, Brother Injured by Truck
VALPARAISO, Ind, Aug. 29 (U. ¥.).—Dorothy Brocksmith, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brocksmith of near Ches- | %®erton, was killed, and her brother | Yames, 11, injured critically yester- | nd when they were struck by a | ransport truck driven by A | |
“It was to spare the human race the untold suffering and indescribable tragedy of the kind we are wittoday that the Kellogg-
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With a perfectly capable power shovel idle in the background, Mayor Reginald Sullivan skinned his coat yesterday and dug the first dirt of the excavation at Municipal Airport for the Roscoe Turner aviation school building. The building will cost $125,000. Col. Turner was unable to attend. He is recovering from auto accident injuries in Methodist Hospital. The Mayor's activities were supervised by (Jeft to right) Rebert Turner, Col. Turner's brother and associate; Leo Welch, vice president of the Works Board; George Olive, former Chamber of Commerce president, and Edward Greene Jr, Junior Chamber of Commerce president.
>AR COOLED ;
gry
= heavy
bedsize.
GUARD EXPECTS CALL SHORTLY
220,000 Likely to Start 12-Month Duty by First of Year.
29
U. S. RESTORES CLERK TO JOB
‘Charges Not Proven,’ Says today, as doctors at Eve and = | Hospital r red the toy boat Letter to Suspended Coal | fom the throat of the 9-year-old Commission Aid.
Wooster, O., girl last night. Here on a visit to the home of Grant Hawkins, suspended nearly ©ff the highway into the children, |® Year ago as a statistical clerk in| v
ne AA PA PP
| Swallows Shiv; It's Out Now
PITTSBURGH, Aug. 29 (U. P). —Joanne Gabig swallowed a battleship.
VJONTH -END
» Bruski, 21, of Posen, Mich. Bruski was held on charges of Yeckless driving. Police said that he was asleep and drove his truck]
BARGAINS
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BROADCLOTH SHIRTS Newest collars
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" FULL ZIPPER SWEATERS $1.00
cloth Boys’ & Girls’
WASHINGTON, Aug. U.P). More than 220,000 National Guardsmen today faced the probability of leaving their jobs and homes this fall for a year's active training, Their early enrollment as active Uniteq States troops was foreshadowed yesterday when President Roosevelt signed the bill giving him
2070
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i her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. | the Indianapolis office of the Bi-
B. F. Collier, Joanne was playing with the metal toy battleship last nn night, when she started to laugh NEW CASTLE, Ind, Aug. 29 (U.|tyminous Coal Commission, has re-| and clapped her hand over her P.) —Georgis McPherson, 26, Lewis- | sejved a letter notifying him of his| mouth. Her hand contained the ville, was killed and Edward] restoration to duty, he said today. battleship and the toy slipped Schooler, 60, Lewisville, injured seri- Mr. Hawkins, who was employed “ously yesterday when their car ;,, (he Governor's office during the crashed into a utility pole. McNutt administration, was sus-
down her throat. Police sought today to identity a pended from his commission post the authority, until June 30, 1942,
pin, SNH gars Ji, Killed | go 16, 1939, as the result of * HINES ASKS V, fF, Wo» call the Guardsmen and Re-
Vi DY NSH Foster | conflict with Ollie Davis, the office serves into the Federal service for . a. { manager. 10 INDORSE DRAFT = anywhere in the Western DANVILLE, Ind, Aug. 29 (U. P.). While Commission investigators) {Hemisphere or in U. S. territories «John L. Deaven, 52, Nashville, was | were questioning him in connection | LOS ANGELES. Aug. 29 (U.P ).|and DOS OSTONS.: Sas Nh ais — Veterans Affairs Administrator| Next Mr. Roosevelt will issue a | Prank T. Hines called on the Vet-|
» killed yesterday when hit by a New | with the suspension, Mr. Hawkins prociamation ordering the first | the office had been required to hand | lanits
York Central train. [made the charge that employees of ii - S i mobilized. Thereafter the \, JOSHEN, Ind., Aug. 29 (U. P).— | yar 9 per cent of their salaries to | erans of Foreign Wars 41st national | onors of the States. since the Harold K. Murray, 21 Vanwert, O., provide a “campaign fund for Sen- | encampment today to endorse the |. ardsmen are ‘essentially state vwas killed and William Wagner, 22, lator Sherman Minton.” Administration's defense and |rather than Federal troops, will call | ‘Wellsville, O., injured seriously yes- |“ “my.i’ oovoe was denied by both| compulsory military training pro= |. owen to duty and turn them| Sern No trailer truck | senator Minton and Mr. Davis. BE ot ‘escape "tie CONCIu- |over to the Federal Government. crashed Into ‘the ‘side ‘of ‘a ‘Treight | “yy, “mawkins said he ‘was ‘uncer-| mh oT i “that se. |This Will be the first time the {tain whether he would accept his| >» : »
pirain. ; Ed . |Guardsmen have been mustered as| ljob again. He said the letter he| lective military training Is no
\ y time measure la whole into Federal service since! ) Wy ) ; only a good peace time as he World War MO GOMER aq received from the Commission's di= ? ® a Te [the Wor ar. U DI rector of personnel stated the | but absolutely a necessary pre
B : ebaration for de The strength of the guard, how : ry to preparat + de- , | + the Pea River state forest had been | charges against him had not been IATL Bree at about 238,000, will be reduced an| named “Tholocco,” after Gen. Sam | proven.
fense. ‘There can be MO COMPIO-|astimated 22,000 men by resigna-|§ KEE MR BOYS Dale, Alabama's famed Indian| Mr. Davis was out of the city t BEE RI : x
p- | MISE OR Tm kers tolq | tions of those who have dependents : : «nia! Late yesterday two speakers | . y : | fighter. The name, given him by | day but his office assistants said | 0 convention ‘that the Coz BR ig A . Paen| the Choctaw Indians, means “Pow- | they had received no a States is on the verge of war. medical examination before being! ®erhy » r Mr. Hawkins’ restoration to duty. D ] | e na oN Ee of Mr. Hawkins rere on |. Barry T. Rranu of San Francisto, ivaiey, into the Federal service, (U.S. Commissioner of Civil Service, | Army officials believed that the! |said that he felt “our number IS troops would spend a week near |up” and that the nation's chances their homes to permit their ranks 1 of remaining non-belligerent were tn, he filled ahd to arrange their! | | few | affairs. o’ Pd Sergt. Alvin C. York of Tennessee (Congress provided several safe- | oi [said : guards for the men. Those who| BOYS “We have never before been SO (give up jobs to enter service are! [near the end of the road as we are [to have them back where possible, |} Boys’ smart hew pattern. Full zipper sweaters Two-tone stvle. Big variety of desirable colors. Nice heavy weight. Sizes 30 to 36.
| today.” without loss of seniority. Debts at | home will be deferred until serve Boys’ $1.98 ys .
Women's New Fall #3, "REVERSIBLE"
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Good looking plaid and tweed coats in fine wool fabrics and corduroys on one side, gaberdine on the other side. These coats can be worn as a fall and winter coat or as a raincat. Sizes 12 to 20.
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| ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 29 (U.P). Perrot,
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£3
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