Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1941 — Page 5
' FRIDAY, APRIL 1%, 1941
Bedwell Meets Friends
| AXIS SHIP NOTES
Schricker (left) hands his old friend and appointee, State Senator Charles H. Bedwell, Indiana Supreme Judge Bedwell, Bridwell, who died Sunday. was sworn in by another old friend. Supreme Court Judge Curtis G. Shake, Vincennes. Among those present for the ceremony were Democratic State Chairman Fred Bays and will H. Hays Jr. of Sullivan, Ind., Mr. Bedwell's ‘home town,
RCA Mdkes Brazil Siation
(Continued from Page One)
Governor
Court. who succeeds William H.
ed at the N. La Salle St. for the pro-| This equipment will the contract | studio installations, three| turn tables, master control small ones. equipment, microphones and the en- antennas
plant here. include all transcription room the
in charge of the India who announced details posed station, said that calls for the equipment large studios and several Mr. Smith reported that tire layout which will he one One of of the most modern ms in the stations recently devoting world. will cost half-mil- time to broadcasts of interest to lion dollars Latin Americans was built by the The largest the equip-|local plant and is now operated by ment for the unit will be construeci-'the National Broadcasting Co.
/
napolis plant
of
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much
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close to
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“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES - 16 On Airliner Saved by a Forced To Follow Zig- Lag Path Through Swamp
|B from the road made it a five-mile| trip to the plane. It was such al | tedious procéss keeping the propel | lers cleared that some rescuers poled | their way along. | & Flares were strung out along the
A A 1 + SALUD ls tt AMAIA Od.
HULL REJECTS 2
(Continued from Page One)
Sabotage Violated hil ‘Hospitality,’ Italy, Germany Told.
| (Continued frem Page One) that “this could not be viewed with | whole route to aid in the work. | equanimity.” | After 14 of those aboard the plane 3 | The Lais incident was expected | had been rescued, Dr. E. B. Hardee| to be followed by requests for the and a nurse accompanied a frog-| | withdrawal of more Axis diplomats. | boat crew to the scene of the wreck | In his note to the Germans, Sec- | to treat O'Brien and McIntyre. It ° | retary Hull referred to the damage | was not until after dawn today that [inflicted on the tanker Pauline the boat returned with the two men.| | Friederich, seized at Boston, and| Since a few minutes after 9 a. m.| added that “if the scuttling and | yesterday, the 16 persons had sat | burning of ships in other harbors|in the half-flooded cabin of the| of this continent may be regarded damaged plane, or sloshed in the | as indicative of what might be ex- | waist-deep, hyacinth covered waters | pected in our ports, it is difficult to outside, surveying the desolate | | see how your government could ex-| countryside for chances of escape. | pect this Government to be oblivious | The plane had landed on the fringe |
Jom
rT
FORD ROW CLOSES LOGANSPORT PLANT
LOGANSPORT, Ind., April 4 (v.| —Ralph Dafhner, general man-| ‘ager of the R. B. M. Manufacturing (Co., said today that 1000 Saployees would remain idle while the strike | at the Ford Motor Co. is in progress. The company manufactures elec |
BEVERAGE CO.
to the situation presented.” | of an island in the St. John River Government investigators are try-! estuary, at the northern tip of the ling to learn whether any German Great Everglades. official or agent in this country Lands in Wild Area | transmitted orders for sabotage of the Paulnie Friederich, one of the Carrying among its passengers two German ships seized, and the Dr. George Crile, the renowned only cne of the two to have been Cleveland, O., surgeon and scientist, | sabotaged. Ten of the ship's officers and men have been indicted in Bos- and his wife, and Mrs. James M.| ton for sabotage and held in $450,- | Cox Jr., daughter-in-law of the 1020. | 000 bail a | Democratic Presidential nominee, | Officials have indicated that the ‘the plane was caught in a violent | | case of the Pauline Friederich would | {ve made a test of the Government's| thunderstorm and was pancaked to,
| power under the 1917 Espionage Act|the ground in one of the wildest
Dr. George W. Crile, internationally famous Cleveland, O., surgeon and his wife, pictured above, were among passengers rescued from
Florida, Both were slightly injured. The "76-year-old surgeon, his wife, and his associate, Dr. P. Quiring, were returning home from a scientific quest here which he hoped would provide the “missing link” in his 14 years of research into the energy-producing glands of man and animal, a study in Which he sought their relation to ‘the common diseases of civilized man,
——————
‘Half in War Supplies, Half In New Ships; U. S. War Zone May Be Cut,
(Continued from Page One)
to take over the damaged vessels. Stretches of country on its route. If the crews are convicted, officials! Mrs. Crile, who with her husband | said, the Government will proceed Was the first to be brought to the, | with forfeiture action. The ship Indian River Hospital here, said then would become United States! the plane ran into a terrible storm |_ be paid. hn thunderheads. I have flown president, who lay in an Atlanta, linto the hospital, as did Bertram ——————— thousahds of miles but have never Ga, hospital recovering from in-|Strook, Newburgh, N. Y. and his I BS% anyiung ike 5s » She Mieron juries suffered in a crash of one of wife, and George Shaw of Memphis, |broke and the pilot lost control of |},is air liners near Atlanta Feb. 26, Te ho left the h ] the plane. He told me later that, «wi. ne en 2 nn, who left the hospital after BRITAIN, GREECE p in which eight persons were Killed, treatment. down, but he did a superb job. bedside radio. | “When the plane crashed, water : y : passenger, checked out of the hospicame up to our hips inside the! Pilot Sights Wreck Ital after treatment. (Plane. My husband was wedged Ay g pm, half an hour after the| At Atlanta, Capt. Rickenbacker /in his seat and couldn't get out. jane was due at New York's Lal said he was “proud of the gang: Guardia Field, an E, A. L. pilot, they did a great job of bringing that were flying around when landed. lage from a searching plane and - Down-Draft Hits Plane messaged the news Shu she Yas “right side up ... people are walkThe co-pilot, Monty Crabtree of on le oe [ Miami, who was brought in later Other planes circled the spot, of the trapping community, said a It w : ; ’ : t was almost midnight when the allocated Tuesday for production of | doWn-draft struck the plane, hurl-| gist survivors reached this town. new materials for the democracies. |ID8 it down 300 feet, and that be-| which had a hospital but no docThe new merchant ships, together ue could climb, another down- (ov. until five were summoned with possible reopening of Aden and raft hurled it to the ground. Crab- from nearby towns. Eight of the fic would eventually relieve the Both engines were torn from the) when the airplane passengers beacute shipping problem of the de- plane and the undercarriage Was oan tg arrive. mocracies. But Mr, Roosevelt would crushed. Tt settled evenly in the = py crile. inventor of the SVSnot say whether this would obviate V2'er, however, with the front part| (on “of plood transfusion used any need for convoying war sup-|°f the cabin slightly elevated. the throughout the world, and of the ships. Sushen ig He PASSENGers re- |, which operations are performed The new ships now being ordered Dam q ea on id] continued all without the usual shock to the nervwill not be ready until 1942, ang the S2Y 80d Night, drenching the rescu-| 5, system, suffered a bruised chest. route from the United States 'S: | His wife had a black eye. | around Africa to the Red Sea is a The 2l-passenger Douglas plane, Mrs. Cox was uninjured, but suf- | The ultimate plan fo raid to Brit-| ‘Jacksonville Flyer,” left Miami at Sulfer ain under the lend-lease plan was| 7:30 a. m. It made the first sched- | Suffers Broken Leg understood to call for production luled stop at West Palm Beach and| Al Marin, steward of the plane, of 15,000 planes, 330 merchant ships left there at 8:16 a. m. It was seen was hurried to an operating room. and about 5000 tanks for the Em- Over Ft. Pierce at 8:57 and was to [He was suffering from serious cuts, | . Beach, then Jacksonville, Bruns- odio was suffering from a disPLANE FORCED DOWN wick, Ga., Charleston, Raleigh, located shoulder. Richmond. Washington, Baltimore, W. H. Andrews, a passenger from MIAMI, Fla, April 4 (U.P) —A Philadelphia and New York. Miami, walked into the hospital, but | National Air Lines plane bound! As the hours passed and the his wife was carried. She had a! from Tampa to Miami with six pas- | sengers made a forced landing at a! with no word of the plane, anxiety H. E. Post, Miami, suffering from | | increased. In the afternoon a a broken leg, was given emergency field at Immokalee in the Florida | search was started. Four Army] treatment here and taken in an amEverglades, the airways office here bombers joined it. Capt. Eddie| bulance to a hospital at Ft. Pierce | reported today. ‘Rickenbacker, Eastern Air Lines! _E. Ww. Hagsater, _ Walked |
property and no recompense would : : + We flew through perfectly horhe was afraid he might land upside kept informed of the search by a Msc. Marsares: Allens. the am Blankets, pillows and everything We Don Johnston, sighted the wreck- ship down safely in the swamps.” lof Mrs. Cox in an ancient flivver ,,ayking it for ground ‘searchers. the Red Sea to American ship traf- ree had a broken leg. 120 hospital beds were occupied plies to Britain with American war- 20rmal ground position. Water .yorve block” system of anesthesia, long one. on Flight No. 14, known as the| fered from shock. pire forces by July, 1942. have stopped next at Daytona | Daniel P. Quiring, Dr. Crile’s weather grew worse along the route fractured ankle. small, water-covered emergency won|
Miami,
|
( SOLDIER HOUSEWIFE
SALESMAN SECRETARY
the wreckage of an Eastern Airlines plane that made forced landing in |
Daniel |
A Ss
enate Ave. LI. 3127
PAGE 5° | trical switches for Ford. Employees | were laid off yesterday.
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