Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1945 — Page 19
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THURSDAY, AUG. 30,
. HUNT 96 AFTER MASS ESCAPE
Boys in Break From lowa
Training School.
ELDORA, Towa, Aug. 30 (U. P.),| —State police and farmers armed with guns! and corn knives combed the coun- | tryside today for 96 fugitives still! at large after a mass escape from | the Iowa training school for boys. Officials of the institution said that the youths escaped after a riot in the dining room during the noon meal yesterday. State highway. patrol Sgt. R. J. Fisher said '179-of the 565 inmates, ranging in age from 12 to 18, participated in the break. Deputy Sheriff Fred Wehrman placed the number at approximately 150. Fisher said all but 96 of the boys had been taken into cus-! tody or had given themselves up! by midnight last night. Darrell T. Brown, assistant superintendent of the ~ school said the outbreak probably was precipitated by the | death yesterday of Roland MilJer, 11. Autopsy Scheduled An autopsy was scheduled for to- | day In the death of Miller, who authorities of the school said died of “heat prostration.” Brown: said! Miller had collapsed in 90-degree
heat “on the coal pile,” where he windows, was sent as a disciplinary aeasure, yell,
Hardin
highway patrol .officers, |
County Coroner E. H. and get killed.”
1945 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
“All Ashore, That's Going Ashore—Marines ‘Invade Japan
_ PAGE 19
4 H CLUB PLANS YOUR G.I. RIGHTS .... By Dougles Larsen di ARGEST F perez Insurance Limit | By DOUGLAS LARSEN A—It premiums are .paid up fe | WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—Herc date you get the $5000 in regular | Counties. | Th d +H club ta} 1 | regarding national service life ‘in- how your husband dies. e Indiana Tub . ‘aI 9 syrance: | Q—I had a brother who was Tuesday and Wednesday will be the ports on how and whether I can married and made his wife the * largest yet offered, according to!continue my government insur- beneficiary in his $10,000 govern- . ia | A~Yes, you can continue your claims she has enough money to Indiana state fair board. [government insurance. You will live on from that policy but.I undisplays, eight more than in 1944. things you received from the serv- much. She is 25 years old. How There will be 754 canned goods ‘dis- |ice. Just pay premiums to the Col- much would the payments be? g . | ministration, Washington 25, D.” C. |equal monthly installments at the Drommey 800 bakery goods dis-| Q—May a person now in service] Irate of $5.51 for each $1000 of inplays.
On Individual Is $ 10,000 Displays Are Entered by 87| are some questions from veterans monthly payments regardless of {the state fair grounds Monday, | Q—I have heard conflicting re- killed in action. He had just gotten Orval C. Pratt, secretary of the ance. Will you explain? ment life insurance policy. His wife Of the 92 counties, 87 Will have finq jt one of the most valuable derstand the payments are not very plays, 624 clothing exhibits and ap- fections Subdivision, Veterans Ad- A.—Payments are made in 240 carry both U. S. government life | surance.
+ Show German Plane (converted) insurance and national | Q.—How much creditor. proteeExhibits will be in the coliseum, service: lite msurance, (ion do I have on my national A—Yes, but the total of all gov- service life insurance? the sheep barn and the light har- | ergment insurance held by any per-| A —National service life insur- | ness barn. A midway with shows | Ison may not exceed $10,000 at any ance policies are not assignable and rides “will be erected just inside | one time, and cannot be reached by ordinary the mdin gate. Q.—My husband has $5000 worth creditors. You may borrow on them, There will be a special display of Zoyer men! life insurance, !but only from the government? the United Of army air force materials in-| |cluding a captured German plane. |
' U 8. Navy Radio The first u. S. marines wade ashore on Japan at Fults Saki peninsula. which he said showed bruises on
the back and arms indicating that BORMANN, H LER’ S he might have been beaten, AID, STILL AT LARGE : he had]
via Acme Telephoto,
15 MEN KILLED IN [men LIBERATOR CRASH
Walla Walla army airfield offie WALLA WALLA, Wash.,
jals said the bodies had been res Aug. 30 by ground search parties (U. P.).—Capt. Edwin F. Zdunccyk, and brought to the field here. The Wyandotte, Mich., was the pilot of Plane, en ‘route from Sioux Falls, D.. to the Walla Walla field, &arried 11 officers and men from in the Blue mountains 28 miles the Sioux Falls army air field and southeast of here, killing all 15 four from Walla Walla.
Biersborn viewed the youth's body,!
man in Nazi Germany, was believed trial at Nurenburg by sul ‘at large, Maj. Gen. I. T. Nikitchenko, go. | Suates, Britain, Bane Bid Russia | A flying exihibition will be giver | hls ! st it was ought that his ; y - viet representative. on the United At first It was g 2a Monday at 4:30 p. m. by a P-59 Nations prosecution committee, dis- |appearande on the mass indictment |and a P-19.
closed that the allies have dis- might means that he already had| The general admission will entitle | T Tiesed reports of Bormann's death |been captured by the allies, as have 'all to a circus presentation includ- _— as unfounded. {all other 23 defendants. ing a cannon act, exhibitions by LONDON, Aug. Speculation over Bormann's| Nikitchenko said, however, that bare-back riders, a flying leap into he heard one of them Russian spokesman said today that whereabouts was touched off by his Bormann was not in Soviet hands a tank of water three deep from a not going to stay here Martin Bormann, Adolf Hitler's inclusion last night among the 24 nor, so far as he knew, in the cus- bicycle 100 feet away, acrobatics | deputy and second most, powerful German war criminals ordered to tody of any of the allied powers. and other atttractions.
| men aboard, the army announced
Sheriff Wehrman said been called at about 11:45 a. m.| yesterday and that he eniered| the dining room just as the last of |
30: (U, P)—A the escapees tumbled out of the a Liberator bomber which crashed
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