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Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana • Page 3

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Logansport, Indiana
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3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Evening; October LOGANSPORT PHAROS-TRIBUNE Flames Aboard Ocean Liner ers Passengers i Crew Extinguishes Flames After SOS Call Is Flashei By Italian Vessel. (ot. 19--(UP)--Fire aboard the jrack Italian liner, Vultianla wasvextiaguished by the ship's crew t'tiay slight data- age, and the iiip proceeded on fts way to New-fork with its 600 passengers. "Delayed balaiise its cargo ing was not pmpleted on time, the Vulvania Naples at 3 a. m.

9 p. m. Sjnday EST). It was two hours. Its way to Palermo.

Sicily, and-ibout 40 miles off Naples, wiai. a wisp of smbka drifted the door of an unoccupied'cibin in the th'ird class quarters. The crewlwas with the greatest' emergency that befall a snii--fire at sea. Captain tie Vulcania's master, to tha'scene. The door was opened and the smoke was so flense tire seemed a serious one.

Determined to take no chance and its passengers, of whom, iany 'are Americans, Capt. Tupjich a precaution gave, the oiler for an SOS. Ships: at. sea picked it up and turned trSir.courses at full spee'd toward tie'Vulcania. At Naples, the mail Citta di Palermo was sent at- ace with a complement of and the tug Vesuvius and a.

followed. The crW of. the Vulcania got Into actid efficiently and quickly, 3ri order avoid any nervousness among ss engere. 'It was that the fire; "I wa run-down-- pale lacked a tec appetite tired underweight." 'Vhat did I do?" itu'tion. told me I needed a -YX toiCi.

Naturally, I am happy grafui for the benefits S.S.S.' Tonic binght me." Yo.u, 1o will be delighted with the way whets up the appetite ied-blfd-cells to a healthier and richer cndition. Feel and look like your ol.iself again by taking the famousB.S.S. Tonic treatment to rebuild yur'blood strength. your make better use of the 3od you eat. S.S.E Tonic is especially designed to buil sturdy remarkable viue is time tried and scientifically- why it makes you ieVlike yourself again.

Available at anjdrug store. S.S.S. Co. M. Clifford Townsend SPEAKS AT THE Big Democratic Rally BERRY BOWL Thursday Evening OCTOBER 22, 1936 8:00 P.

despite. the dens-e smoke, was a small one. It 'was without trouble and Gapt. Tup- arich' wirelessed-'-a cancellation of his SOS while '-rescue ships were just toward him. The rescue boats from-Naples had.

not cleared the harbor. Within'ah hour i was out completely and Capt. Tuparich wirelessed that he wafe procee'dihg on to Palermo'and New He was due at. Palermo this afternoon. Passengers oh the" liner include Coi.

Jerome G. Pillow, who is returning to aiier service as military attache of the American embassy at Rome, and his wife. Names of other Americans, listed as from -New York, were given here ae Miss Ethel Richardson, A. David and: R. Dewey.

News came, from the ship that during an work before normal was absolutely no alarm and that passengers did know until breakfast that there had been a fire Death Calls Local Lady Mrs. Emma Rebecca Tnrnpangh Passed At'the Home of Her Son In tailing health for several months and critically ill following a stroke of paralysis suffered two weeks ago, 1 Mrs. Emma Rebecca Turnpaugh, widow William Turnpaugh and life-long resident of Cass county, passed away at the home, of her Everett Turnpaugh, 1730 George at 9 o'clock Saturday 'Mrs. Turnpaugh was a member of the Ninth Street Christian church, She iSjSuryived the" son, "two N. Shafer of North Jndson and Mrs.

S. M. 'Haas of Gary; two sisters, Anna Irwin of O.wners Gro.v.e,- 111., and Mrs. Susan Bair of 1330 Third 15 grandchildren and one great granddaughter. 1 A eon.

Leslie, died in 1921. Funeral services will be held at the residence Tuesday afternoon at.2 o'clock with the Rev. W. E. Carroll of the Ninth Street Christian -church officiating and burial will be made in -Ramer cemetery.

Loses Sight of Eye in-Sawmill Accident KEWANNA; Ind. Dean Kumler, local young man, suffered the loss of sight of one eye in a sawmill accident in Virginia where he is e-nployed, according to word re-' cerved here. A board which Kumler 'was cutting "kicked back" breaking "the lens of his glasses and, causing a piece of the glass to penetrate the eyeball. Abandoned Stolen Auto Found Here Abandoned after new pair of shoes and tools had been taken from i an automobile belonging to Charles Campbell of Kokomo was fourid'east of the. city near the Lover's Lane and High street road corner Sunday morning.

The car had been stolen in Kokomo Saturday night. WORKER HfJCTKES HAM) PERU. Oct. 19--Lester Gugel, 40, of Wabash B. R.

,2, an employe of Indiana company, was treated in Dukes Memorial hospital for a bad laceration that severed, the ligaments in a finger.on his left It, may oe. necessary to amputate the finger. His finger was while working' on a saw at the factory. ALOJ03 OK BARGE ERIE, Unless he already has been'drowned, a man is drifting alone Iast night across storm- toosed Lake 'Erie on the Genevieve Ryan. COAL-A- TRY YOUR SKILL I BOD MINT SEAS, RUS JfAljC POP TKM REJSJLIT BIY CEES PRESENTED BY UNEMAXINKUCKEE ICE AND COAL CO, ANS.

TO xt I No. 6 I Before pnrchas-S ing yonr -irjntcr's IsnpplT of I on ns. Lake Haxinkuckee Ice and Coal Co. 824 MICHIGAN AVE 100ANSPORT IND. Youth Held As Suspect Believe loung Man Found Han- sacking Car of Attorney to Have Hidden Gun, Hearty DELPHI, Ind.

Charles: Engel, 22, Tennessee -sas his home, is in Jail, after-his arrest late Saturday allegedly going through automobile of Attorney Jason "Bean'. He-was arrested by. Loren Ayers state who had been searching for the person responsible for hiding two packages in an alley near the Mrs. William Trobaugh home which were found earlier in the evening. In.

the one package was a large quantity of prunes and in the other was a revolver and a large quantity of candidate matches. Engel is, believed to have hidden the Papers taken Bean car were found on the person, of Engel when he was'searched at. the jail. The young man told officers he had hitch-hiked to Delphi. Jefferson Bureau Will Meet Tuesday W.

L. Sprouse, superintendent of the Logansport schools and Hassll Schenck, first vice-president of the Indiana farm bureau, will be speakers at the Tuesday night session of the Jefferson township farm bureau at the Lake Cicott school. The program starts at 7:30 o'clock. For entertainment, numbers will be presented by the McVay brothers, Bill Pugh and Nancy Douglas. A Halloween party is to follow the meeting, members being asked to bring apples and-doughnuts.

Burnettsville School Tax Rate Hearing Set I A hearing will be held at the Monticello. court house Oct. on the objection to the nine. cent tax. levy in the Jackson township' budget for the purpose of raising funds to finance the construction' of an addition to the Burnettsville high school.

A representative of the state tax commission will preside at the TJXDER KNIFE Francis Sebastian of the Ciosson Insurance agency submitted to a major operation at 'St. Joseph's hospital last night after suffering a sudden attack of appendicitis Sunday afternoon. Nineteen Persons Die In Lake Erie Disaster CLEVELAND, Oct. 19--(UP) bodies 18 men and a woman, life preservers, bobbed in the choppy waters of Lake Erie today, victims, of, that, sank the Canadian sand ship, Sand Merchant. Seven men survived.

There was only the faintest any of 19 missing were alive. All authorities had' given them'up and, coast guard vessels searched the lake for the bodies. The survivors who saved themselves by clinging boats for 11 hours Saturday night and Sunday morning, were recovering from exposure. Inquiry in the cause of -the disaster will be undertaken here and probably in Canada Capt. Graham McClelland, master of the "Sand Merchant," rested aboard the Thunder Bay quarries at Sandusky where he was taken after the boat picked him and two members of his crew up.

"If was the worst storm I have been in during 30 years on tho lakes," Capt. McClelland said. "I everything I could to preye'nt loss of life, but the sea was too heavy." McClelland told" how he ordered everyone on deck late' Saturday, night when the wind blew at ,45 miles an hour and waves were lashed 20 feet high. Describes Storm The Sand Merchant is an (open hatch ship," McClelland said. were weighing 'down the sand so I order everyone in the boatsi I stood on the bridge and gave the for them to be lowered.

At the same time I jumped in without a -life preserver just before the ship capsized." i McClelland said when he came to the surface someone grabbed him and pulled 'him to one of the two lifeboats which 'had been overturned when the "Sand Merchant" floundered. "There were five of us on the boat at first," he said. "Herman Gault fought for an keep his two brothers, Armos arid Joe, awake. But they finally slipped Into the water and we.never saw them again." Gault and John L. Ideson, of Pt.

William, Ont, were taken' to Sandusky with Capt. McClelland. The fou rother survivors who were picked up by the Marcrtiette. Bessemer No. 1 were to Cleveland.

They are recovering from in a hospital. Father Sees Son Drown. Martin White, 39 year old second engineer, told from his hospital bed last night how his son, Harry, Mrs. Floyd Boldry Named Head of H. E.

Clubs in Cass County Annual Meeting Held At Court House Saturday Afternoon; Clubs to Continue Home Furnishings Project. 20, to the second lifeboat for hours and slipped oft crying "Try to save yourself, Dad." White, in critical condition, said the only.way he managed to save himself was by "taking 'exercises." His hands are swollen and bruised: He exercised them constantly- dufing the long hours before he was three who. were rescued with "White and brought to Cleveland were: Fred Morse, 28, Windsor, machinery operator; "William Gifford, 37,. machinery. operator and Jack Meuse, -32, Yarmouth, N.

"The cutter. Fred Lee the Toledo coast guard station searched the waters northwest of Cleveland last night for wreckage of the sandsucker and. the bodies the victims. The 20 persons who had no't been accounted for were: List of Missing First Mate Barney Drinkwater, Port Stanley, Ont; his wife, second Mate Wilfred Mourrle, Victoria Harbor, Ont; Armcs Gault, Victoria Harbour, Ont.r D. Bourrie, Victoria Harbour; Deckhand Harry White, Ponte Mo'nd, N.

Steward H. A. Lytele, -Toronto; Assistant Cook Frank Burns, Toronto; First Engineer McGinnis, Bay Duvin, N. Third Engineer Sanford Gray, -Victoria Harbour; Fireman Harold Cannon Harvey, N. Peter Daigler Port Dalhousie, Robert Harper, address unknown; Norman Wilkinson, Toronto; -A Robttalle, Midland Oilers Nicholas McCarthy Sidney, N.

Ronald, F. Demille, Raxton, N. Repairmen S. W. Agrant, Thorold, Ont; Joe Gault, Victoria Harbour and Fred Died, Midland, Ont.

Recall Former Tragedy CLEVELAND'-- The sinking of the sandsucker "Sand Marchant" with the apparent loss of 20 lives was the worst disaster on Lake Erie since, the famous "Black Friday" tragedy of Oct. 20, 1916, when four snips went down with a. loss of 52 seamen. Mrs; Floyd Boldry of Adams township, with the Home Economics: clubs of the county, was president of the Cass 'County Home Economics clubs at the annual meeting held Saturday in the north court room. She succeeds Mrs.

Albert Quade. Charles. Maroney of Harrison was selected vice- chairman; Clarence Newer, secretary treasurer; succeeding W. O. Coder and Mrs.

Charles Coleman, Boorie township and Miller, Washington, directors. The group voted to make Second Year Home Furnishings as the major study for 1937 which will continue the general course used this year. In connection: with, this portion of the events of the.afternoon Miss Bertha B. Cook, home demonstration agent, discussed, with the officers the, program for the. remainder of the Upon the report and.

recommendation of the place and menu committee the Broadway Methodist church was the site for the -annual Achievement day program, Nov. 12. In preparation for the program that day the' following committees were named: Luncheon; Grace Alder and Ethel Program: Mrs. Charles Coleman and Mrs. y.

Ticket and Reservation: Mrs. W. S. Wirick Charles Maroney. Reception: Miss Minnie Sarig and Miss Bess Poundstone, Marie- Hennessey, George Woods and Mrs.

Charles Coleman. Mrs. Clarence Newer and Mrs. Ray Baer. State exhibit: Mrs.

William Manning. PEPPERMINT MAKKET Peppermint, oil '(dollars per cwt) U. S. pharmaceutical 2.50-2.65. Convict, Released But Two Weeks, Murders Cattlemen and Aged Man in Old Cabin Calls Guard to Cell and Makes Confession After Being Arrested for Officer Sunday Jones, 32, who was released, from Montana state prison, two weeks ago, con- Jessed Sunday, police that he killed three prominent cattlemen and an- aged man who lived iii a cabin on the outskirts of town.

"It was liquor," Jones having said. "Liquor Is to blame for it all. I'was His-'confession told of a fortnight's career, in crime. that''ended In shooting, the cattlemen while they lay, bound and helpless, on the-floor, Walter Goflecke, Otto Heit- roan, 40; Manuel. Arrascada, 40; an elderly man, who been tentatively identified as Joe Steca.

The bodies were found in the cabin, old. clothes. First degree murder charges-were died against Jones. He-was'in jail at Carlin, Nev.y charged with arrest when police investigated to see whether he the disappearance of the Sheriff 'C. A.

Harper'said'Jones called a deputy to his. cell, confessed the 'murders and: directed of- flcers to the cabin the bodies were found. Gives Account Jones' confession' said that he cashed a check at an Blko store and obtained $3. which he spent. He started to hitch hike he saw Godecke.

Arrascada and Heilman near the Southern Pacific cattle corral. Two automobiles nearby, and Jones, drawing his pistol, ordered the men to keys, to one. of them. None of the three men could produce the Jones took $40 away from them and marched them down the road. At an.

intersecting gully, ordered the; three'men; to. turn off; planning to bind them and escape. He saw a cabin by the river -and ordered- them: there Instead. Steca appeared and Jones forced the four CHAFED SKIN Don't suffet needlessly! Apply soothingResiticflOintmehtto quicklyt relieve the fiery torment Bad restore comforc to the tender, reddened skin. men the cabin, where Steca was forced'to bind the other, three.

Then Jones, tried to bind- Steca, who said he shot him. Then he said, he stood in the doorway of tha cabin and' shot, the other" three, men. He fled-to Carlin where he lost the $40 in. a poker game. -There he -a with 'Constable and was'jailed.

GEORGE BBKT K1L1ED George W. Burf; 60, of Lafayette father of Leonard D. Burt of" Akron, in St. Elizabeth 1 hospital, Lafayette, Friday night of a skull when he fell into a cellar while supervising' the unloading of coal at. the -home of Mrs.

Alta'Senour at Lafayette. His wife, a daughter and two other sons survive. IURIING WILL von PLEJISE MNET TCMRANTK TO TREAT YOU FINE! H1R INSTANCE, LOVE. If AI TJ or relief when you're troubledwithheartburn.sourstomacB. Eas? Keep your relief right with you always, for unexpected, emergencies.

Carry I urns like millions now do I Toms ate only yet they give relief that is scientific, thorouek. Contain no harsh cannot OTCT- alkahze your stomach. Just enough antacid compound to correct your stomach acidity is released remainder passing unreleased from your system. For quick relief carry-Turns! lOc at any drug store, or the 3-roll ECONOMY PACKforlsS FORTH! TUMMY TU UNDEHEATEO, MINNESOTA FACES'TOUGHEST TEST GREATEST THRILL IN FOOTBALL iS A PERFECT SCORING MINNESOTA PULLED A BEAUTY LAST YEAR IN THE MINNESOTA- NEBRASKA GAME MINNESOTA HAD ADVANCED DOWN: THE'FIELD-FOR. A FIRST DOWN- ON NEBRASKA'S 9-YARD LINE.

NOW HERE'S WHERE FOOTBALL BRAINS COME-IN. HERE'S WHAT TO WATCH FOB AT THE. NEXT GAME- SPORTS ANNOUNCER NEBRASKA I DOWNS YDS TO GO fFI THE BIG MOMENT--WILL THEY SCORE DOWNS YDS TO GO A LINE PLUNGE OFF CENTER IS STOPPED BY NEBRASKA. THIS PLAY IS NOT INTENDED TO SCORE. MINNESOTA 'IS DOING WHAT EVERY CLEVER.

TENNIS STAR', FENCER, OR PITCHER DOES RUNNING PLAYS TO GET OPPONENTS OUT OF POSITION OFF TIMINS AGAIN MINNESOTA THRUSTS AT THE LINE. NEBRASKA STOPS THEM DEAD. THEY'RE FIGHTING WITH EVERY.OUNCE OF VIGOR TO P.REVENT MINNESOTA FROM SCORING: 9 TEAMS OUT OF 1O WOULD UNCORK THEIR SCORING PLAYS NOW. BUT NEBRASKA EXPECTS'THIS. MINNESOTA HAS TO USE DECEPTION.

FOR THE THIRD TIME THEY CRASH THE LINE. THE BALL IS ON THE YARD LINE. MINNESOTA GOES INTO A HUOOLE ((. --AND COMES OUT WITH THE SWEETEST SCORING PlAY IVE EVER SEEN. LET DRAW YOU A COACH'S DIAGRAM MINNESOTA IS IN SINGLE WIK6-BACK.

FORMATION-WITH AN UNBALANCED LINE.THE BACK, TAKES THE PASS FROM DOES A HALF SPINNBR'-rAND TOSSES AN UNDERARM LATERAL JO THE RISHT BACK WHO. FEINTS- AT IJTHE UNE.THEN THROWS A SECOND IEET HALF- WHO-HAS BEEN COMING OVERTIME TAIU- QUICKLY AND CUTS OFF MEANTIME EVERY MAN-ON THE NEBRASKA TEAM WHO CAN STOP THE PLAY IS TAKEN OUT. THANKS TO THE. THREE PLAYS JUST PRECEDING, THEY: ARE OFF-BALANCE AND OUT OF POSITION. THIS MAKES IT EASIER TO STRETCH THEM DOWN FLAT AND OUT Of THE RUNNINS.

TH6 ACTION PICTURE SHOWS THE PERFECT MINNESOTA BLOCKING. TOUCHDOWNS UKE THAT SEND CHILLS UP AND DOWN MY SPINE. I GETT SO UP AT A BIG GAME I CANT ENJOY MY, FOOD AFTER WARDS )V I LET ME GIVE ANOTHER GOOD POINTER THEN: SMOKE CAMELS BETWEEN COURSES AND AFTER HELP EASE i STRAIM FOR-ME AND BRING ME A FEELING OF DIGESTIVE I--t, WELL-BEING I COVER'A GOOD SECTION OF. THE COUNTRY-: SEE FflAC- TICALLY-ALL THE.TOP-NOTCH ATHLETES--CAMELS ARE THE FAVORITE SET THE' ALL-TIME HIGH, FOR" AND, FLAVOR. AND CAMELS DONT GET.

ON NERVES CAMELS SET YOU RIGHT! SMOOTH AWAY THE DAY'S UPS AND' DOWNS, LET DIGESTION SET.OFF TO A.GOOD START. JUST EN, CAMELS AT MEAUIMES, AND AFTER, i SMOKIN6 CAMELS SPEEDS UP THE FLOW OF Dh 6ESTIVE FLUIDS--INCREASES ALKALINITY-. BRINGS A SENSE OF WELL-BEING--SO FOR WWSHOWS SAKS SMOKE CMNHS. CAMELS ARE MADE FROM FINER, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS--TURKISH AND DOMESTIC--THAN ANY OTHER POPULAR R.J. REYNOLDS COMPANY E.

J. Reynolds WINSTON-SALEM. NORTH CAROLINA.

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About Logansport Pharos-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
342,985
Years Available:
1890-2006