Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 189, Hammond, Lake County, 2 February 1922 — Page 1
THE WEATHER Generally fair tonlybt and Triday cept probably Ugkt snow flonlti la Jtreme north portion; somewhat colder 1 southeast portloa tonight Jl'i1,!?'!. y Cari-.r. ,n Butmoil ad W. Hiwmoal 50o per month on street and neg-s stands, 3q per -;opv.
World's News by LN.S. Leased Wire VOL. VX. NO. 1S9. TIIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1922. HAMMOND, INDIANA LEN
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MANY
VICTIMIZED
BY
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VENDOR
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Expected That First Billot Will he Taken Tomorrow BT FRANK E. liAiON ISTArr CORRESPONDENT 1. N. SEP.V ICE. ROME. Feb. 3. To roost important yap&l election in mers tha: half a ntury began today -when the conclave ; e2 cardinals assembled in secret in a Vatican to ballot upon a successor to Benedict XV, late soverign pontiff the Church of Home. Upon the outcome of the election Will depend whether a reconciliation is to bo effected between the Vatican and the Italian state. It is expected that the tret ballot will not be taken until FriAat morning. Eight cardiDaia were absent. Cardinal OConneli of Boston, and Cardinal Dougherty of Philadelphia, are enrouta to Koase. tu may arrive, before the allotting is completed. The regulations permit the breaking of the seais n the doors of the Slstine chapel to dmit tardy cardinals at any time, ven if they do not arrive In time to participate in the election, they vHl have a part in the coronation cererconies. . The absence of a cardinal does not p-cvent him from being elected Pope. The next supreme pontiff Mill be the two hundred and siity-first to occupy the Holy Chair of St. Peter. A two-thirds majority is necessary to elect. The ceremonies of the 5ay began at 30 o'clock with a solemn high mass, celebrated by Cardinal Vannutelli. head of the tfacred College in I'aolina Chapel. Monaignor Galli read the traditional Latin address pro eligendo pontefice exhorting the electors to discard personalities and seek inbpiration from God. All of the cardinals had to take the ancient oath of secrecy, binding them to silence i pen ail that occur within the sealed chapel. Also, they are bound y solmen ecclesiastical oath to do nothing to hinder an election. Th5 factional fee'lfig in the Sacred eollegs made it cfpln that the election wonld be a difficult one and Indicated that the ballotting would be long rawn out. Predictions were freely made that cither a compromise candidate of a "dark horse" some comparatively obscure cardinal would be. h03en. The high political feeling ws entendered by the following circaiuUances. After the death of Benedict XV., Cardinal . Gasparri. papal secretary of at&tc, made it known that he would attempt to have tho late pontiff's rolicy carried out by bis successor. The chief ikim of this policy was reconciliation between the Vatican and the Quirtnal. Supporters of Cardinal Gasparri claitnd 29 votes. The opposition faction. wblcH opposed reconciliation on the ground that It oald Impair the international prestige f the church, was led by Cardianl llerry del Vf.l, carneflengo of tho Holy Roman Church ; 'secretary of the congregation of the holy office and archyrtest of tbo Basilica of the Vatican. Adherents of Cardinal Merry del Vai Claimed to have 20 votes assured. The program for the afternoon called for the assembling of the. violet robed ard!nals in the Faolina chapel at 3:50 0 clock. After s-hort individual prayers the procession, preceded by cross bearers and a choir chanting "Veni Creator," enters tho F.istine chapel where the polling will take pin-. The Vatican has tern completely svealed. although communication may be had with IV: office of t!,- rapal secretary of .'title. The cardinal will be shut off from the outside world until they make a election. It was thr duty of Cardial Vannutelli, cean cf the Sacred cilct; and Cardinal Ga.parri, Papal f rrt.iry of slate- to fid-niiistr.r tho oath to the efflcer:! of the. onrlave. A special warning is given to the conclavists That violation of the oath of secrecy will mean o v-comnmniratior! and other penalties prescribed by the new Pope. Cardinal Gsscparri, accompanied by three, cardirals and torch bearers in near let livery w ill examine a il of the inwallfc'l area for "Mnawavs." Seventeen rv rnep. including It nuns and nix assistants v ere locked up in apartments of their own. They will do the cooking and clo-'tn tt"' crockery. Three run idete, white papal outfits, ene large, one small and the other medium were placed in the robing room adjoinins- the chape! for use by the, new pontiff a ron ai the teller announce- an election. It in ep.rtt-d that hesinnl-g tf.n"'rr-.-v rrt-'ruint,. two balio'-5 will I"- t.n.cn iji'iv UweliiTs m Ht. I ' t"r' :-ij".sro have , lead' windows and r !' for "look- i out" pasts f"r n'jwbp;i ;erm- n. Special telephone w.res have been strung. After each votr the haik ts are burned. A 5tove had been p!ai- d in the Sisttne. hapoI with chimney projectingthrough a window. Jn the vt-nt of a jsoleeMon oti'y the; paper is burn".!, jnakinir ;i w hite -r-.'e. U; the evetit ,,f el.vl :oi- Jit raw i,- ntix--d v'lr. tito K-tUot to icai-e t!u- ;moi.f ilack. TUtts. w lien the ditcher '.t.i ! white snioiie issuing from th chimney they know a new Pope has been elected.
(Continued on page ten.)
Did You Heaf That
WASTED energy. Acting fa tarter tor Ha.rnood jitneurs. AND pour that he saw his shadow this r.ommn, it means six more weeks of useless 6un parlors. BY the way, brother, whose side are ; ou on. Bui McAJeer s or A. Murray turner ? 7 H f II, that's the right siae. VERNE CTU 5 LEK is working on a big deal that will be closed most any S err e. JtAYOrt TsnOVTS haa been invited to attend the National Rivers and Harbor conference in Washington, D. C.F Ifarch 1st and 2nd. PROPRIETOR of a soft drink parlor complains that the whiskey Is being watered. "I can taste the chlorine in the liquor," he says. "WALTER KAISER gets $35 fine and 20 days In county jail for public indecency. ITe was charged with annoying north aide girls. THE Board of Education Is wondering !f there is anybody in town with $340,000 in spare cbange. If bo they can have the Central school property, February 14. TICKET'S for the K. C minstrels are on sale at Carroll and Xewton's, Armstrong's Jewelry store and Kussmaui's cigar store. Henierobcr the date, Feb. 3 and 10. MRS. SIDNEY PETTTNGILU aged 6 years, moftier of Byron B. Fetttngill, of Hammond, died yesterday at Starkey, New York, according to telegrams received here. CHIEF EMIL. BUNDE again wariiS motorists that February 16 is the last day for securing auto head lighta ar.d licenses. After that dy -violators will be arrested. YOU are right Susie. Fred Scharj w-a rot the subject of a "sanitary inquest," That was an error. It should have read "sanity inquest." Fred's cleanliness was not Questioned. IF ail the men in Lake county irho were promised tha prohibition enforcement job would stop buying drink a there wouldn't be any need of a prohibition enforcement officer. JOITX EECKilAN recall that --Then h wis in the stats legislature some legislator Introduced a bill to stop the killipg of chickens within the. corporate limits of a city. REGtTLAR monthly meeting tonight of the Jewish Community Center at Kneseth Israel Temple, Sibley street. Important topics for discussion, refrefshruents and entertainment. MISS HART MORAX, city Titirne, is called to witness stand today In trial of Jack Wright, Hammond policeman, facing charge of manslaughter In criminal court at Crown Point. TTTE home of Deputy Prosecutor Jo Todd at 555 Lyons St., was brighter this morning, due to the arrival of a bouncing son last night. Little Joe and mother are getting along nicely. ILVSTY canvass of business district fails to discover any of " those o, f. clothing store dummies. You know, rosy cheeks, snappy black moustaches and iixed stares. "What's become of them? POLICE baF'ball team comprising 15 :ncn begin preparations for. winter training trip. Letters are meelred from a number of cities bidding for the honor cf harboring the cops during their training period. PROHIBITION Director Bert Morgan and U. P. Marshall Mark Ptoren of Indianapolis arrived in Hammond this afternoon to destroy the etoek of bonded liquor which has been accumulating at the federal building. ' IT has been announced that O. B. Lloyd of the Lloyd-Brcckenbrldge Oil Company of ITammonii, has been appointed to succeed E. Russell Calloway, secretary of the Indiana Oil Jobbers Association, elected last October who has re-signed. Tlffi oity.'s first damage suit he- ' cause of non-compliance with the snow t .ho cling ordinance, was filed this afterI noon by Mrs. Klizabth Toth. liST Shrfj t-cM ae. fjhe broke her wrist in a. fall ion the icy pidewaik alongside tho car barns, December 2"rd. TODAY'S whisper: They do say A. (. Carter is thinking about etarting an open air dancing pavilion next door ! lo !-. ii place- of buf-hie."s at IS State ;t This be aue Indiana Gardens i ! no n.cre. One tmatrines Carter con Id t make dancing a.s popular as bowling. Tins it Candlemas Day. In church J hHtory the feast of the Frefflntatlon Of It Christ in the Temple. Also in Catholic liturgy the day for blersing the candies I tor altar or other sacred purposes. As srrottndhog day, legend says that if th j woodrhisck today s"e? his shadow he rej turns to his hole and thorc cntues a reI eu: rence f wintury west ner. "i'OSVFRT the public library ir,-t-a city hallr erect a men-orial tui Idling and library in Harrison park; turn the present city hall lover to the youth of the city as a club: Etart a war garden at Turner field: take the ptret cars off nohman street, so they- don't 1 interfere with the Jits; bring back i '.111,-b-jqiio Fhowd and breer; prohibjt ' mlil end s.iles: s-'top the increase in I en ther.'-l vt to lieath; t locate the : r.ii'i'-ij'i'i; and give 111- mayor a vacatioii .ir.d I'll come aiid !ie in Hami mpnti." The writes liveg in Heges1 wich.
"Continued on Page Fiva)
SWINDLERS SHIFT SCENE FOPERATIONS Crooks Who Duped ForeignBorn in This Locality Now in MTLWACTCEE, ' Wis.. Feb. Shifting their operations from the Calumet regdon in Indiana three alleged swindler, who are believed to hare been planning a coup upon several prominent nd wealthy residents of the foreign-born sections of Milwaukee, are under arrest at the detective bureau, pending an Investigation. The mn gave the names of Pete Pivolovich, 32, South Chicago. and Stovko Maegolich, 30. and Stev Ljnstin. CT. Gary Ind. Detective Arthur Burns and John Riley arrested the three in a saloon at Sixth and Clyboum streets Monday night and searching their room at the Miller hotel disclosed the complete "layout" of tha alleged swindle game. Included in the find was the "fiah" roll of l5 in firgle dollar bills with two $20 bills on the outside which was set forth, according to the detectives, as representing hundred of thousands of dollars. There was a wallet stuffed with newspaper and the familiar tin box of the con game. Ljustin was taken back from Milwaukee to Hammond. Ind., a year ago after his arrest here on a charge of mulcting a Hammond resident for $3,300. and is out on bail there now awaiting trial, the police say. ' A resident of Mulrdalc who reported to the police last week that toe was swindled out of $1,250 by the "tin-box" game is to be brought in to attempt to identify the men under arrest. NATIONS LABOR TIEUP LOOMS IN FUTURE Administration Is Apprehensive Over General Situation. WASHINGTON. Feb. 2. Belief that the qatlon Is facing the- greatest Industrial tie-up in its history within the next six months was privately expressed today in high administration quarters. Open efforts at a coalition between the railroad workers and the coal miners, for the avowed rurpose of resisting proposed wast cuts, caused distinct uneasiness. If the union between these two -key" industries Is effected and the belief was expressed generally today that it will be It will add matcr'ally to the increasing menace of the general labor situation, which now points to a widespread strike soon after April 1. when the miners' national wage agreements expire . Joint strike action by the railroad workers and the miners would result very shortly In almost complete industrial paralysis, It was admitted today. Reserve coal stocks are wma.ll even now, and there is no hope of greatly increasing them before the strike, predicted by Secretary of Commerce Hoover for April is called. Not since the great strike of bituminous miners in the winter of 1919, when a general tleup was averted by an injunction Issued in the federal court at Indianapolis has there been such apprehension in official circles as that which prevails today. The situation may be made more difficult it was pointed out today if the railroaders and the miners after coordinating their forces should undertake to include the now unorganized steel workers, thereby forming a "triple alliance" with tremendous strength. CHICAGO. Feb. ? A scrubwoman saved $10,000 belonging to the Argo State Dark today. Her appearance routed three men who had forced an entrance to the bank, cut the wires of the burglar alarm system and were preparing to dynamite the t.ifc. The bandits flcj at the scrub woman's approach, taking about $1,000 they had obtained from a cash drawer. YOUNG JUDEA IS ORGANIZED Toleration or Co-cperation, TVbjch? is the Interesting title of Rabbi P.ap- ;. port's sermon Friday evening, February 3d. at the Sibley 'Street ?ynagog. i-r- i, es begin at S o'clock sharp, vji.ote a lively interest is being manifested in the "Jlls.torj- Circle which m-ts immediately after services foi the ftudy of "The Jew's Share in American History." A j'Sntor -ocietj, 7axned "Young Judea," consisting f boys and girls between the ages of 12 and- 13, has been organ-aed by the Rabbi. The rliecrs of th club are the following: Norm. -in Feiniu-rg. ptesidtnt; Norinne f'ohfn. -.ice presUIer.t; Rose Kriegr.r, treasurer, aud Anna Friedman, fecre-tarj-. The young people are rehearsing a dra-ma to be presented "by them somein iiarch this J-ear.
SCRUB WOMAN SAVES
bank mm
ET
VIEWS OF NEW GARY COUNTRY CLUB
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aiC tibiaM ' n - .mi ! i' ' faiir li tin ti These- pictures shown a view of the exterior of the new Gary Country Club recently dedicated and taken from the northwest. The other view 4s an in
Is" .
"Flu" Widely Prevalent in City
Hammond has 10' c.iaes of fnfiuensa This is a minimum, conservative esti mate. It was made yesterday by Dr. "William A. Buchanan, city health director. i There are probably a greater number than one hundred cases in the city. But records and reports reaching DT.,Iiuchan an justify this calculation, he says, a a minimum. Not since the devastating climax of the 1318 epidemic have their been bo many influenza victims In the city. This condition is true of the whole region. It is manifesting itself as nation-wide. But there is this straw to catch at With reasonable care and prompt attention the viettm may suffer no other effects than those of an aggravated cold. Nfalnutrition, carelessness and Ineffectual home remedies are the ba!s upon which th disease builds itself. Prompt medical attention ia usually a successful curb. POLICEMAN IS ON Til CROWN POINT, Ind., Feb. 2. The trial of Jack V.'right the Kamin.'.a policesman who shot and killed Cleo Dutton lat April as Ijtton was driving down Calumet avenue in Hammond, Is being held in the criminal court before Special Judge G-eorge Hershman. The charjro Is second degree murder though it was the census at opinion at the time 'it happened that the killing was purely an accident. The Hammond police had been tipped off that a ear transporting liquor was going through at a certain timeWright aware of thlH suspicion tho car In which Dutton was driving. He signalled him to stop. Dutton paid no attention to the signal, Wright aht Intending to hit t?ie tire and Instead killed Dutton. Attorney Jojerph Conroy is defending Policrman Wright. STOLEN MAIL SACKS FOUND CHICAGO, Feb. 2. Eight mail sacks, two of them empty, were tosbed from an automobile as it speeded through an alley on the south fide today. The bagfJ later were found to be the ones stolen yesterday from Joseph Syartz, a rnall clerk, at the Pennsylania railroad station at Whiting, Ind. Fostoffice. Inspectors were notified and took charge of the sacks. A woman living near the place where the bags were found saw them thrown from the automobile and notified the police. Two cf the bass v, ere c'oti.pletely fiiled and apparently never had been opened. Four others had been ripened and apparently some of the mail taken out. Two -others were entirely empty.
TO
mnm m mm 6 itMfl. ? iiti mil iiw mi in ! n terior showing one end of the big lotinjrlng rooan with its charming furniture. The club membership Is composed of prominent. clttzenB of That is what Dr. Buchanan said, and as h did so ha pointed to tha death record of January. There Is chronicled 44 deaths. Fourteen resulted from influenna-pnen-monia. Seven from violent deaths. Three were from diphtheria. Twenty were from other causes. "Will the pitiful scenes of 1918-1S1J he repeated? Will the most terrible scourge of a century again sweep across the land like a strlckening breath of death Just when the first sweet breeze of spring is due? Dr. Buchanan doesn't think so. Most of the cases so far reported are of a light type, he says. But there is the depressing record of January with its twelve victims. And there is the dally recurrence of new cases that increase with mushroom-like rapiditj. It is no less easy to write about this thing than it. is to read It. No one is 7 fK-jj-ig
LATEST BU
JL il. JO. r( i.t rrriv.i INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Filuu.N3o.i.K reu. -. Twenty-eight men, . possibly more, are believed to have perished early today as a result of an explosion in the Gates mines of the C. C. Frick Co-ke company at Gates, 15 miles frojn here. Company officials estimate that between 40 and 60 men were in the mine at the time of the explosion. Five bodies have been recovered. (BH.Lr,TD. INTERNATIONAL r,EWS SERVICE MINNHAIVU.S. lco. four northwestern states today are m the throws of a severe snowstorm which Is crippling telegraph and telephone wires and causirg delay to railroad tramtportation . Between Minneapolis and Duluth, all tetophonc and felegraph wires are reported do n . i nri.rF.Ti . I INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE AMU -NO i V. rcu. 2. The aiten-vpt to form a Central American republic, consisting of Honduras. Guatemala and Salvador, has resulted in a virtual failure, according to a despatch to th frtat department today from Franklin Morales. American minister to Honduras. f INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE vSUL ill tii.Nl. ini.. i'oi). 2. "Absolutely untTue" was the. reply today of Knute K. Kockne, Notre Dame coax-Ji. to charges of Grovcr Hooper, coach of th Taytorvllle, 111., football team that Rockna knew two days after -the widely heralded Cs-rllnville - Taylorville game Nov. 27 last t'at eight of his men had tr.kf n p.irt in the cont"; arcl had 'kidded" theru about l lie i r u'e. fea t (BtXI.ETl.J INDIANAPOLIS. Ind, Ftb. I. Governor McCray today arppiovwl
mmmm ..spsair i 1 5 r f J I il I' ' -.; faJ ji - Gary; Crown Point, East Chicago and Hammond who are quite proud of the quaint cluh house in the mldist of the Turkey Creek golf links. so canons as to treat flippantly a national horror. To exploit for the mere sake cf publicity the ravages of an indefinable and uncertain menace that numbers among its victims who! families and persists in the minds of millions as an equivalent of, bereavement and even terror, would bo little short of sacrilege. News stofies telling of the progress or subsidence of the disea.se are matters of purport. They cannot be over looked. Physicians nay the morose, those susceptible to suggestion, and the hypochondriac will suffer through reading about the "flu." But Dr. rtuchanan maintains that publication cf this news Is essential to the community and acts as a warning to the over-confident and , the careless. And in this respect especially, he says, is the parent too much anaicted to the use of home remedies brought to a realization of the ineffic'Contlnued on Page FJre) the rerport of the pflrdns board. Clemency was refuse the following: John Connley, Lake, county, 10-"1 years a-ssault tnd battery; John Fvatcliff. Lake county. lO-L'O years, burglary; Evan Celesta Giannettl, alias Tony Norelll. Lake county, life, murder; J-hn Barnes, Lake county, 2-21 yeara. rape; Andrew Thomajr Lake county. 0-3 4 years, robbery. (HI M,KTF. f INTtHNATIONAI. NEWS SERVICE WASHINGTON. Feb. 2. i-pc cia taxes must b levied to cr?-'cui-e a soldier bonus, sls the foreign debt cannot be relied upon for this purpose, Secretary Mellon stated emphatically today before the bouse ways and meang committee . Bn.tEnt.i (INTERNATIONAL NFWS SERVICE. CLEVELAND, Oniu, Feu. C. George Laklns, S,, first attempted to kill h'.s wtfa, Mrs. Ruth Lakins. 27, and ber sister. Mrs. Lenorc Zupnick. then turned tho gun on himself, the bullet gojrig through hia temple, kiUtBg '":m inetajitly. (BLtltTHS.) KANSAS CITY. Mo., Feb. 2 Six dwelling houses wtre nurned liy fire this morning. At noon the fames, fanned by a Strong wind, v." re not yet under cofitroi and other houses were, threatened. Eight companies of Gremcn were fighting the fire. (BtltETIV) WASIIINOTON, Feb. 2. Stirred to action by the fear of a nationwide strike of railroad workers and coal miners as n result of the proposed conlition of their forces to resist Tssge reductions-, high of- j fiicials of the government prepared today to combat any efforts to tie up transportation facilities or to stop necessary supplies of food and fuel.
LATINS V
OTHEST CROOK FOUND H1TIN Sells High Grade Cars to Bankers. Find Victims in Many Cities tSPrCTAL TO THE TIMES WHTTING, InJ.. Feb. 2WU;ii; police are today holding the pmoothest dealer In stolen automo-blips. He was eo good at tbo business th:". ha sold hlg-rsgrade ears to bankcr-i and police officers as weJl as the- one) nary run of folic. His came, is Tboma,? Ca-ppareill an.) his home-Is at 8513 Enst Ntncty-Thir-1 rtreet, South Chicago. CapparelU was arrested yesterday efternoon after an investigation vy Whiting police snj memtiers of tiu Chicago Detective Bureau had revealed that he had sold stolen cars tx-. Whiting, Gary and Hsgewisch. Ar least seven cars were scld In "WhiLln-; alone . The majority of the machine-, handled by Ca-pparelH wera Martnou.--and Hudson?. He seemed to havgreatest cuccess -nlth the cedan type. Among his Whiting customers wer-j the following: Joseph Bid, of toe Bank of Whllir.g. Hudson sedan. John Urban, former saloon proprVtor, Marrnbon sedan. Desk Sergeant John Enak of the Whiting police, Overland sedan. Tony IVan'r. motorcycle cop. Hudson sedan. Joe Jurek, Hudson sedan. Two more cars are tn a j-m-w? g-irai' They were brought tlie.ro by CupparclU and are beli(-ved to have been sold bu were being held until arrangement -could be completed. Detectives from Chicago brought th'first Information which led to the exposure of tho salesman's activities. They learned that a Marmon cot-re-spending to one Floien iu Chicai. had been seen in Whiting. It nes found to be tho one John Urban ha t purchased. He had traded In his old car which was In good condition . Urban furnished a description of th" man with whom the deal had ben made. Whiting officers whi- were assisting in the Investigation twed fur1 rise fe-r tho deEcrlption tallied wit?, the man who had sold cars to Officers Wagner and Benak. That started the roundup and soon several othr victims were IrK-ated. It was learned that Cappa.re':Ii was to return to Whiting yesterday an. noon so the officers waited. The dapper salesman dropped in at the. Ma'-t'-rn drug store and started to talk business. Officers Bnak. Wagrner and Young served a'warrant charging grand larceny and obtaining money under false rretenses. He spent the niglit in Jail. This morning a brother of Capparelii nryl a friend camo to visit hijn In his ceil. Folico decided to hold them alao until their records couUi be. investigated. A Hudson car sold to a Ilegewi .) man was found late yesterday afternoon and detectives are today tracing several cars which arj said to have hern sold in Oary. There is smie doubt as to whether the Overland sold to Sergeant Dfhak wa tolen. No record of its the't has been found and it la believed i: may have been the car originally owned by Capparelii. Hits Phone Pole at Roby While Speeding On Indianapolis Blvd. .Dr. H. K. Crockett, Chlcs-go pays.:d'ati, living, at S4T East End avenue, surprised Itom'md police this morning when they tailed at St. Margaret s hospital to learn ho-.c much nearer t death the doctor was than when thfy c.arried him. bleeding and unconscious into the hospital yer.terday afternoon x'ftcr removing 'him from the wreckage of his au'omoblle crushed when it struck a telephone pr-le at Indianapolis boulevard and IdSth street. The receiving sister informed the cops that Dr. Crockett had gone. Too bad." they si-id. "H" was uc i a promising looking chap." But their aym-oathy quickly chacg-ci to unmarked incredulity when tho sister informed them that Dr. Crockett had gone, not psychically but physically and spiritually both. After lying eentteless for several hours after being removed to the hoanu.i re Crockett ree.ilr.f-d orclii'ifness, asked where he was an 1 why and denied that be was near d"3n. lie rnlained bow he- aa K"'t.g about 45 miles an hour west in India.-napc-Us. boulevard. How he strucn a i road, swerved from thi Mret. crashed Into a telephone pole and was pitched forward on nis ceaa. He didn't recall any more. But police say Officer Adam Fur.k fn him lving'in the road n?ir the scene of a similar accident that neariy cost tho lives of four young peoplo three work" airo. Dr. Crockett tc't U. hJ5nital tl.i.' morning aprarcnt.l;-' littlo the wors? for his experience. His automobile was smashed to kindling wood aad hatttrsd tin.
CHICAGO DOGTOR IS
AUTO SMASH VICTIM
