Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1941 — Page 19

ARI oo

Gil

anata ET

CIRCULATORS

| FRIDAY, SEPT. 19, 1941

{Going Right Was Wrong, Major! /

FIELD, Sept. 19 (U. P.).—A major and two other officers of the Sec“ond Army captured in a command car north of Plainview, La., in war games today indignantly refused ito believe they had been taken “until shown a map. + “Hell,” the major cried, ‘should have taken: that left fr

INDUSTRIAL GROUPS

‘URGED TO GIVE BLOOD

Representatives of Indianapolis industries last night were urged to organize committees to sponsor: vollinteer groups of donors for the blood plasma bank to be ‘built: up here for the Army and. Navy : ‘by a Red Cross committee. : Maj. Gen. Robert H.’ ‘Tyndall,

: chairman of the Blood Donor Serv-

ce committee which will have headQuarters in the Chamber of :Commerce Building, made the suggesgion at a dinner of the Personnel Association of Indianapolis in the

' Central Y. M. C. A.

+ He said that a great number of Individuals have already volunteered gs donors when the offices open up about Nov. 1.

eo © © | —— _ @ Looking: Ahead, Just. a wee hit; .

—WINTER OUTSIDE. Co

SUMMER INSIDE . . . eo oe ——

Now Is the Time

DAWSON CHARGE

‘Cheap Political Attack,’ He Says of Claim He Broke Promise to Labor.

EVANSVILLE, Ind. Sept..19 (U. P.).—Governor . Schricker, speaking

Labor convention yesterday, branded as a “cheap. political attack” a

strike last March. Gov. Schricker declared the action was “prompted entirely by the appeal of the Republican officials of ‘Richmond and Wayne County” and “upon their frank admission that they. were unable to preserve order and “prevent serious harm to the people of their community.”

tion Tuesday. Felt It Duty to Answer Governor Schricker said he had) “not thought of injecting a political

note into my prepared address before this convention,” but added

{that he felt it his duty to answer

“the . cheap . political attack made upon me by the Lieutenant Gover. nor.” . “Repeated visits and calls over a

‘| period of several: weeks were made

to the Governor's office by these Republican officials, . pleading for help in’ a trying situation,” the Governor said.

Sought Peace, He Says “Threats of an impending massacre were published in the Richmond papers, producing a situation that no; self-respecting Gov=ernor could ignore. = “The State Police did ‘not go to Richmond to break a strike, to prevent’ peaceful picketing, or to ene Jorce the settlement of a labor dispu

stituted authorities of the community to aid in preserving the

+ |peace and protecting the lives of

their people.” The Governor added that if “the Lieutenant Governor had been prompted by anything other than

closed a labor incident which occurred last January while the Governor of Indiana was in ‘Washington

.|attending the inauguration of Presi-

dent Roosevelt. “Serious trouble incident to a strike threatened the peace of a

- jnorthern Indiana city at that time,”

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Mr, Schricker said. “Because of the

absence of the Governor, an appeal

| was made to. the Lieuteriant Gov-|.

ernor for help, who in turn lost

“Jno time in calling the matter to [the attention of ‘the State Police

Superintendent, “I returned from W.

= by {0 plane because of the: seriousness of {this situation and I am proud-to tell © Jyou that the difficulty was brought 40 a peaceful and satisfactory ad-}

justment through the efforts of our

Labor Department.

“This same Lieutenant Governor, in ‘the hour of the nation’s greatest defense effort, journeyed to Scottsburg on July 4 and in a public address made a vicious attack upon the United Service Organization's campaign. . Rests Case With People

“This campaign at that very hour was being patriotically led in In5.1diana by the late standsrd bearer

Hillis). “The Lieutenant Governor’ expressed amazement that the government should countenance an effort to raise funds for the benefit of the spiritual and social welfare of our boys in camp. In spite of this strange, if not unpatriotic position, Indiana oversubscribed her quota. “I am entirely willing to rest my case in answer to the attack made by the Lieutenant Governor in the hands of the laboring men and women of Indiana.”

600 GREEKS STARVE DAILY, SAYS CONSUL

With: 600 persons a day dying of starvation in Greece, Nazi soldiers are predicting that conditions will soon approximate those in Poland where the citizens are “slaves” to the Germans, Nicholas Lelly, Greek

consul general, said today.

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IRKS: SCHRICKER|

before the Indiana Federation of}

charge by Lieut. Gov. Charles Dawson that he broke his promise. to} labor in. .using State police at the Richmond; International Harvester

"Lieut. Gov. Dawson, a Republican, | [5 made his charge before the Federa-| - Li

“They went out only in response {to a desperate plea from the con-

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of the Republican parly (Glen

NEW YORK, Sept. 19 (U. P).—|

: Red Sta rTar

“Glamor be hanged” 18 the Rus-sia-saving attitude ‘of such de- t fenders of the crimson flag as this’ determined girl who fills a man’s job: hauling hawsers on a White Sea and Onega steamer.

VANNUYS CRITICIZES

JUSTICES’ SPEECHES

WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (U. P.). —Chairman Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) of the Senate Judiciary Coms mittee, . today - ‘criticized = Supreme Court: ‘Justices who recently . have made’ addresses urging support of President Roosevelt's foreign policy. . “The traditional place of Supreme Court Justices is on the bench and not: on political rostrums,” he said. “1 do not like to see the court abandon its tradition of impartiality.”

¥ Departm ™ |effort to keep them out of streets

{man said, can lead only to acci- ‘| dénts, with the children coming off

i} ie has offer P.-T. A. meeting | éxplain .the hazards of

keep a more careful watch on thelr

‘That's up to the Jaen,

Outstanding Savings

Police Ask Parents’ Aid in

Keeping Children Out Of Streets.

A stiteh-in-time safety campaign for school children was begun today by : the Police ent in an

in after school hours:-~ Since school started, the department: has received hundreds of complaints that children are playing dangerously in streets and violating traffic ordinances with bicycles. These things, Capt. Leo Trout-

generally worse -than the drivers, and in many instances the cause of the accidents will be the children themselves. °

Offers Safety. Speakers He has offered. to. send a. police | ou to

piaving in streets to parents. 80 that they will

children. “Police officers can and do’ ‘watch, children ‘and guard them on their way to and: from school,” Capt. Troutman said. “But. they can’t watch them and keep them. out of streets during after school hours.

“We're going to try to imp ress upon the parents of this City hat careless “play ‘results inevitably in accidents. If children continue: to violate traffic laws, we'll order them and their parents to safety court.”

4 Children. Hurt -

Four children were injured in traffic yesterday, none seriously, police said.

They. were ‘Daniel Renihan, 3, of 208 S. Summit St.; James Abernathy, 6, of 1910 Bellefontaine st.; Joseph. C. Kern, 10. of 837: N.. Oak-

| 19 i and a Girl Attend Traffic Court’in H ospital

J By JoE COLLIER

Nineteen boys and a girl, all 18 or under and all traffic law violators, grouped swund a bed at Clty Hoepital, On the bed lay an old lady, old the grandmother of any of them. She was as pert as an invalid: could be. ‘And because these. youths were there, she was reminded again of why she was there. :

enough to be

In the twilight of Feb. 1 this yea. she stepped from a curb at Central

Ave. and Fall Creek Blvd, across the street. She had the green light. Never-| theless, a motorist ran the red light, struck her with his car, and then went on. She’s been in bed ever since, most of the time with much more pain than she has now, and she’ll be there long weeks from now. A moment later the same youths were grouped around another bed. There, fantastically arrayed by wires and pulleys with feet in the air was Larry Gershanoff, who is two and a half. Larry was safe last February when the little old lady was injured, because he was just learhing jo alg, but not good enough to

But by: Sept. 4 Larry: had learned to walk, and was outside. He was struck. by. a car that day and was ‘carried 50 feet on the bumper. . Upstairs the same group of youths saw. a 24-year-old man. His feet were weighted ‘with pulleys and weights, and a strap under his chin kept him rigidly “motionless. | This man was involved in am auto accident at’ Noble and E. 'Washington St. on “Sept. 7. His neck was

broken. He will be in that position,

chin strap and all, for at least six months longer: Then he probably will have to wear a rigid cast on his Sours for the Temainder of ‘his ® i Not far away lay a 35-year-old

~|man, who seemed hardly conscious

that anything unusual was going on ‘when the group gathered around his bed.: When: the doctor asked him if he was an-auto accident victim, he mumbled something, that was "all, He did not comprehend. Well he was. On July. 18 his car

land Ave. and Charles Jones, 7, of 1022 Collier St. :

TomorrowLast Day!

was involved in. a. crash. with -an-{a

“other and he was } uncpnstious for

Ze 2 7 a 27/7/48

ttre weeks. Delicate surgery was performed on his skull, but his brain is damaged. He may never be able to comprehend more than

a total invalid all his life, dependent

every minute of the day on some

one else,

Around a corner in the: corridod was an 85-year-old man, leg strapped to a board. A car, hit and run, struck him early this year at Illinois ‘and 30th Sts, and hell spend all: of his last days in pain because of that. In the corridor once more, Dr. Ye ae Myers, hospital superin-

him and-said: “Those are just a few of our traffic accident cases. And they appear now at much better advantage than ‘when we first got them. -But bad as they are, they are not the worst. The worst ones didn’t survive at And then the youths trooped to the hospital = auditorium where Judge Wilfred Bradshaw held his Juvenile traffic court yesterday afternoon. They were pretty somber, and. apparently - much impressed youths. None of them talked throughout the whole trip. The bailiff called a case. The young girl and mother stood before the judge ahd Judge Bradshaw read the charge. “You are charged with speeding 70 miles an hour on 38th St.” the Judge said, with. frank incredulity in his voice, . | The girl admitted it. Judge Bradshaw revoked her driver's license

he does now, in which case he'll be|i

tendent, gathered the youths about

¥ "person must be made to

| Juvenile Court.

And so they went until all cases were tried. And as the youths left court, free to go home but: mostly

pital to the exits. : About that time a nurse was feeding the man with the broken neck; little Larry was asking if his mother had come to see him yet; the 85-year-old man was sleeping, exhaust« ed from the effort of just being

with some restriction on future ac-| tivities, they walked solemnly in-] deed down the corridors of the hos-

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