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The Kokomo Tribune du lieu suivant : Kokomo, Indiana • Page 1

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THE KOKOMO TRIBUNE THE DISPATCH VOL. XLVI--NO. 243 EVENING EDITION KOKOMO, THURSDAY, JULY 5,1934 TWELVE PAGES PRICE--THREE CENTS KOKOMO LEGION COLOR GUARD KILLED Pickets and Police Battle in Marine Strike CLUBS AND TEAR GAS BOMBS ROUT STRIKERS ON FRISCO WATERFRONT Five Men Shot and in Melee, Many Cut, Bruised and Gassed in Clash Between Workers and Officers--Bricks Fly as 2,000 Persons Take Part in Action--Mediation Board in Session- Look to Governor to Declare Martial Law--Heavy Property Damage Reported. San Francisco, July rioting, swept the San Francisco waterfront today. Two thousand pickets posted by the striking maritime workers who have tied up commerce since May 9 answered the challenge of public and private agencies attempting to open the port, with bricks and flying fists.

Five men were shot and wounded. A dozen more injured so as to require hospital treatment. Two freight cars were set afire. Stray bullets pierced houses in the waterfront area; trucks were smashed. Much property damage was done.

Workmen engaged on the new San Francisco bridge were driven away by the rioting. Work had to be suspended. Governor Frank Merriam and his adjutant general, Seth Howard, in Sacramento, kept in constant touch, planning to call out the state militia the moment the situation got beyond police control. At 11 a. m.

ponce still seemed able to cope with the rioters who were becoming scattered, tired and showing signs of disorganization. The trouble began after, trucks operated by the San Francisco Industrial Association in an effort to break the strike had made about 15 trips from the McCormick Steamship company's pier to a nearby warehouse, carting away coffee and general cargo. Then a belt line switch engine began moving freight cars into the pier of the Matson Navigation Company, Pier 30. Fire Spurs Action. Approximately 2,000 strikers and sympathizers were gathered back of police lines near the Matson pier.

These pickets saw fire break out In two box cars some distance away and seemed to accept the smoke as a signal for action. They surged forward. Police rushed to meet them. Bricks began to fly. Police brought up a tear gas squad and for a moment there was the battle of exploding gas bombs and gas guns.

Men fell, clawing at their eyes as the gas burned and streamed. Foot police, clubs flying, pressed on. Radio patrol cars came screaming. The strikers and sympathizers began to give way. Soon they were running, with police in pursuit.

One police group drove the pickets up Harrison street. Another turned toward Rincon Hill which overlooks that section of the waterfront, and began clearing its base and lower slopes of strikers, sympathizers and plain spectators. Not long after 10 a. m. it appeared the police were gaining control of the situation rapidly.

Look to Governor. The city began looking to Sacramento for action. Governor Merriam in a formal statement last night said that state militia would be called today if the strikers in- terferred with operation of the state-owned and operated belt line railroad. Many believed this outbreak would be considered the (Continued on Page Two) WILL Santa Monica, July say it takes a big man to admit he is wrong. Well, here where I become a giant.

I said that the Republicans made their campaign speech when the whole United States was tuned in on Germany, or Amos and Andy, and that nobody heard It But by 'golly I was wrong. From some of the criticism I read part of it from the Democrats. They must have all been listening. I had no idea they were even paying any attention to the Republicans Get these Democrats on the defense and they are not so hot. A Democrat is a better faultfinder than he is an explainer.

So there is liable to be some excitement at this fall's election Yours, MANYHOOSIERS DEAD; INJURED OVER HOLIDAY Brownings, Traffic Accidents and Fireworks Add to Accident Toll. Indianapolis, July --Many were killed and scores of counted today'in-In- diana's holiday accident toll. Three of the victims were drowned. Traffic accidents claimed two lives. Two men were killed by railroad trains.

Two men succumbed to the heat and a fireworks accident caused one fatality. The victims August Braasch, 44, Chicago, drowned. Edward Hollander, 16, Chicago, drowned. George Grecnwaldt, 16, Kendal- vllle, drowned. Joe Lakina, 45, Kokomo, traffic.

Melvln Apple, 50, Oaklandon, train. Adolph Rotschild, 19, South Chicago, heat. An unidentified man, about 60, at Calumet City, heat. Verna Sturges, 24, Richmond, traffic. Anna May Lott, 5, Gary, fireworks.

Unidentified man, about 20, near Warsaw, train. Braasch drowned in Lake Eliza, Porter county, while swimming. Hollander succumbed while swimming In Flint lake, Porter county. Greenwaldt drowned in a gravel pit near Garrett. Apple was killed when he walked into the path of a passenger train near his home at Oaklandon.

The unidentified train victim was found on a railroad bridge over the Tippecanoe river, in Kosciusko county, apparently brushed from the side of a freight car. Rothschild collapsed while attending a picnic on the Gary beach. He was revived but died later after drinking a large amount of cold water. Lakina was killed and 14 others were injured in a bus-truck collision on the National Road, seven miles south of Greencastle. Miss Sturges was killed and four others were injured in an automobile-truck collision on the National Road, west of Richmond.

The body of the unidentified heat victim was found in a vacant lot by Calumet city police. The Lett girl died in Mercy hospital at Gary of burns suffered when a firecracker set fire to her dress. Fireworks, auto collisions and a wide variety of other accidents sent scores of others to hospitals with injuries. More than 20 persons were treated at City hospital at Indianapolis for fireworks accidents alone. Auto accident victims raised the total to nearly two score.

One small boy was wounded by a stray bullet Kenneth Fowler, 28, dirt track race driver, sufferd a fractured hip when the car he was piloting during qualifying trials for a race at Indianapolis careened off the track. Victor Budzinski, 29, Ober, was wounded a rifle discharged as he tossed it into a wagon. William H. Kerrigan, Logansport editor, suffered a fractured pelyis and three Chicagoans, Mr, and Mrs. John Laszak, both 40, and Viola Wantola, 20, were injured, In an auto collision on state road 43 near Wanatah.

Mrs. Herschel Payne, LaPorte, broke both arms in a fall from a cherry tree. Mrs. Mel Copelen broke her collar bone when she HAS WITH (Continued on Page Two) Isn't Same Place It Back in Horse and Buggy Days. Was AUTO NO LONGER NEW THING Is Older Than Most of the People and Buildings in Ko komo.

An article in Wednesday evening's Tribune dealing with the first road test of Elwood Haynes' crude but efficient forerunner of the modern American motor car, which took place on July 4, 1894, forty years ago, has started a number of Kokomo citizens -who have managed to survive the highly hectic period intervening between then and now, to enumerating things we have lost and things we'have acquired in it. At the time the automobile was invented there was no such thing as a moving picture theater, no such thing as a radio broadcasting station, no such thing as "an airplane, no such thing as a dirigible, no such thing as a stream-lined train and no such thing as a rural mail route anywhere in the world. Those are just a few of the major things civilization has acquired since Elwood Haynes' self-propelled contraption cut its first capers out there, on what has become the historic Pumpkinvine pike. Local Gains and Losses Those things, however, belor.g to the whole world. There are several things which Kokomo individually possesses now it didn't have then.

To begin with, it has about four times the population it had at that time. It has acquired all its-paved streets, all its concrete sidewalks, all but three or four of its schoolhouses and all but a like number of its churches since then. It has also obtained in the interim its postoffice building, its public library building, its Y. M. C.

A. building and nearly all the industries that are now in operation here. Now as to some of the things -It no longer possesses which it had at that time. It has lost its street railway system, its courthouse with its malodorous hitching rack, its passenger service by steam road between here and Indianapolis, its hack lines and star routes to Burlington, Poplar Grove, New London and Jerome, and the entire gag field and pipeline equipment through which it was served with fuel abundantly and cheap. Some Striking Changes.

It also has lost about a dozen livery barns and as many blacksmith shops. There is not a preacher, a doctor or a dentist left in Kokomo who was following his when Elwood started America on its wild ride in a benzine buggy, and only a couple of lawyers, J. C. Kerron and W. C.

Overton, are left cf those who were practicing their profession here then. Only one or two business houses are still operated under the sams names that they were going under forty years ago. Not a bank is left in the community that was going then. More than half of the retail district has been built or 'rebuilt within the period, all our ice houses have disappeared, Crown Point cemetery has more than doubled in size and the Democrats have kicked the Republicans out and taken control of county affairs. This last is a thing which local folk used to think never could happen, but they were fooled.

Nearly all of us are given to regarding the automobile as comparatively new thing, yet it has been here longer than most of the business houses, most of the factories, most of the public buildings and most of the people in Kokomo. COURT DENIES WOMAN HELD IN DEATH OIL PLEA FORNEW TRIAL Albany, N. July Judge Earl H. Gallup today denied a motion for a new trial for Mrs. Anna Antonio, mother of three children and held in the death house at Sing Sing prison after conviction with two raen of slaying her husband two years ago.

Mrs. Antonio and the two men, Vincent Saeta and Sam Farad, twice had been given last minute reprieves by Governor Lehman on the nights they were scheduled to die in the electric chair at Sing Sing. A statement by Saetta on the night of June 28, one hour before the trio was scheduled to pay with their lives for the insurance slaying of Salvatore Antonio, caused Governor Lehman to stay the execution. The district attorney declared Saetta's statements were made solely to gain a delay for himself and possibly to influence the governor to delay the execution until a new trial was granted. HITLER PRESSES CAMPAIGN TO ENLARGE NAZI POWERS; VON PAPEN MAY BE OUSTED BULLETIN! 1924, Associated Press) Berlin, July French embassy issued tonight a formal protest to Germany in the form of a vigorous denial that France was the villain in the "foreign conspiracy" phase of the recent Nazi revolt.

The German press blew the lid off the "foreign power mystery" tonight with charges that the late General Kurt Von Schleicher, chancellor for 58 days in 1932, had had dealings with France. French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou, the press said, revealed Von Sehleicher's plot to the British at Geneva on May 30, adding "Hitler's days are numbered." (By United Press.) Chancellor Adolf Hitler vigorously pressed his campaign to strengthen Nazi power in Germany today while party district leaders from all parts of Germany met at Flensburg for an important study of policy. The Flensburg sessions, which Hitler may attend later, will provide a cross-section of opinion and reaction of the nation to the purging of the party last week end when SHOT GENTRY PAINTER SAYS Ex-Klan Chief Slain for $60 and "Million Worth of Satisfaction." Jefferson, July itinerant painter confessed today that he killed Earl Gentry, former Indiana Ku Klux Klan leader, according to Sheriff Joseph Lange. The sheriff said that George King, 35, admitted that he shot Gentry for $60 "and a million dollars worth of satisfaction." King's capture and confession came a few hours after Mrs. Carrie Gill, 58-year-old widow, confessed that she planned Gentry's death because she was "deathly afraid of him." Mrs.

Gill said she paid King- $60 for the slaying. Her brother, Ferdinand Probst, 63, admitted that he helped King remove Gentry's body from his sister's blood spotted kitchen and placed it in an automobile. The car and body were found last Sunday a few hours after the killing, at a lonely spot on Rock river. "Sure I shot him," Lange said he told him. "He should have been killed a long time ago.

I'm glad I did it and I'd do it again. I got a million dollars worth of satisfaction out of removing him." Gentry had lived with Mrs. Gill since he was acquitted seven years ago of the murder of Madge Oberholtzer, Indianapolis girl. The same charge sent D. C.

Stephenson, former grand kleagle of the Indiana klan, to prison for life. Lange said King would be arraigned on a first degree murder charge today with Mrs. Gill. Her brother -was to be arraigned as as accessory. Solution of the mystery of Gentry's death came from discovery of a will in which he had left his prop- ty to Mrs.

Gill. Across its face Gentry had scrawled: "Nulled arid void by Earl Gentry, Nov. 28, 1933, when I was threatened to be killed by Carrie Gill." Mrs. Gill confessed after four days of questioning. President Visits Haiti.

Cape Haitien, Haiti, July --President Roosevelt left the cruiser Houston this morning and came ashore in this island republic, his first stop enroute to the Pacific ocean. In a brief address at the Union Club, the American President, speaking partly in French, said American marines would be withdrawn from Haiti in about a month or six weeks and that he hoped they would always be remembered as friends who tried to help Haiti. An hour after his arrival President Roosevelt returned to the Houston. At noon President Vincent called on President Roosevelt aboard the cruiser. Finds Two Pearls.

Jay Tilden, 1085 South Elizabeth street, went fishing on the Fourth of July and brought home as his catch two pearls, which, when worked down, will be worth about $25 each, he says. He ran out of bait while fishing in the Wildcat east of Jerome. He picked up three mussels, opened them to cut up the bi-valves for bait, and in the third shell he found the two pearls. Although imperfect, both are nearly as large as a small pea. allegedly traitorous sub-leaders and others were killed.

The status of Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen, whom Hitler sought to. oust from the cabinet, continued indefinite. His future has been considered significant because of the political implications to be drawn from the disposition of a man who has the full confidence of President Paul Von Hindenburg but has been considered opposed to Hitler's bloody activities recently Von Papen offered his resignation but it has not yet been accepted although Hitler flew to Neudeck presumably to get the president's permission to accept it. Aa a result, one possibility as reported by the United Press yesterday was that Von Papen would step out and accept some such post as that of Saar commissar, or take a vacation. As a result of Hitler's orders modifying the reign of terror in Germany this week, fewer deaths were reported and most of those now being revealed occurred last week-end.

The toll probably will be around 50 for all Germany. In Silesia, four civilians were killed in the Reisenebirge mountains while "attempting to escape." Except for a statement that the victims were not Jews, official sources had only meagre information on the shooting. At Munich the deaths of several more prominent persons were disclosed. They included, reports said, Dr. Friederick Beck, director of the academy exchange bureau, and Fritz Gerlich, former editor.

The German crisis continued to have serious repercussions in other countries. In Austria, Prince Ernst Von Starhemberg, Helmwehr leader, bitterly denounced the German Nazi leaders. In Rbumania, the government dissolved pro-Nazi groups. In France, the ambassador to Germany, was instructed to protest rumors that French officials had been involved in anti-Nazi plotting in Germany. FRIEND TELLS Leg Injury Prevents Driving Auto---Gang Hideouts in Northern State.

Indianapolis, July report that John Dillinger, use of his right leg permanently impaired by a bullet wound, is resting in a hideout in an unnamed northern state, provided a new angle today in the. widespread hunt for Indiana's fugitive desperado. Information that the injury is so serious that Dillinger no longer drives an automobile as published here, purported to have come from an unidentified ex-convict -who -was acquainted with the gang leader in the state prison, and who saw Dillinger in Chicago several weeks ago. It was not the first report of an injury to the notorious gangster, Dillinger's father said his son walked with a limp when he visited the family home near Mooresville last April. The former convict was reported to have said the bullet ripped Into Dillinger's leg, tearing nerves in the right thigh, during a bank robbery following the elusive John's wooden gun escape from the Crown Point jail.

According to the story, Dillinger's right leg trembles and is almost limp, his gun hand twitches and the injury, aggravated by lack of proper medical attention, gradually is affecting his entire right side. Under strain of great excitement, however, Dillinger is said to be able to move rapidly. The picture of Dillinger hampered by an' injury is in contrast to that of him as a bank robber whose catlike agility in leaping over cashier's counters gained police notice last year. From his hideout, where he is accompanied by Homer Van Meter and John Hamilton, both members of his gang, the ex-convict's story continued, Dillinger rides Into Illinois and Indiana, sometime to Indianapolis, for his funds "held by his friends in several places." The informant was represented as believing "it's just a matter of. time until some stool pigeon turns him up," that if he is alone when police surprise him he'll surrender without a shot, but "I wouldn't even squeal on a rat." Van Meter, according to the convict's story, is the "tough guy" of the gang, "kill crazy." The convict related Dillingei last was in Indianapolis the latter part of June and spent four hours in a third floor apartment on the north side.

FUNDS WILL 00 TO TAX UNITS BE.REFRIDAY Checks Written for Shares Due from Spring Tax Collection. ADVANCES ARE I Two Townships, City and Schools Made Early Draws from the Treasurer. Distribution 'of shares of the spring tax collection due the eleven townships, the city, and the school city of Kokomo will be made Friday by the county auditor. Checks for the amounts due each unit were written Thurday, and trustees and representatives of the city and schools may either call at the auditor's office or receive them through the mail. Settlement with the state and the county already has been made by the auditor.

The auditor's settlement sheet, completed after midnight last Friday night and taken to Indianapolis Saturday, was by the state auditor. Checks were written in the following amounts Thursday: Center township Township tax, tuition, special school, total, $12,503.86. Clay township--Township, tuition, special school, redemption school -bonds, total, $4,985.97. Ervta Total $9,985.18. Ervin township Township, tuition, special school, redemption school bonds, total, $9,985.16.

Harrison township Township, tuition, special school, total, $6,948.68. Honey Creek township--Township, tuition, special school, total $5,717.16. Howard township Township, tuition, special school total, $4,800.58. Jackson township Township, tuition, special school, redemption school bonds, total $6,586 40. Liberty Gets Liberty township Township, tuition, special school, redemption school bonds, library tax, total, $12,782.51.

Monroe township Township, tuition, special school, total, $3,263.76. Taylor township Township, tuition, special school, total, $8,380.52. Union township Township, tuition, 963.71; special school, total, $4,379.41. Greentown--Corporation tax, $1.719.36. Kokomo--Corporation tax, sinking fund, police pension, firemen's pension, total, $58,029.35.

Kokomo school $19763,88 special school, redemption school bonds, library tax, total, Sill 010.93.. Forrest Addington, deputy auditor, said that the advances were made some time ago by the treasurer: Clay township- tuition, $2,625, special scnool, $1,375, total $4,000 Ervin township, tuition Kokomo corporation, $40,000, and Kokomo school city tuition, special sen and redemption of school bonds, $4,000. MONTANA COWGIRL IS SENTENCED TO DEATH Los Angeles, July Nellie Madison, former Montana cowgirl, was sentenced today to die on the gallows at San Quentin prison, September 24, for the murder of her husband, Eric, movie studio cafe, manager. Find Slayer's Car. Indianapolis, July automobile in which an unidentified man fled after killing Tom Lee, 72, Chinese laundry proprietor, here Monday, has been found abandoned at Quincy police were notified today.

The' automobile was stolen from Howard F. IPoltz. one of two men kidnaped by the murderer in his flight. A A Mostly cloudy, probably showers and storms tonight and Friday In central and north portions and possibly In" extreme portion Friday; not so warm In north portion JOE LAKINA DIES AND OTHER LOCAL VETERANS INJURED IN BUS CRASH Returning from Terre Haute Celebration 'in Bus Meet Tragedy When Sides-wiped by Cattle Truck Near Greencastle---Lakina Instantly Killed and Six Others More or Less Injured as Bus Is Demolished Against Bridge--Passenger on Truck Near Death--Five Indianapolis Women Also Hurt. Temperature readings: Maximum Wednesday, 98 minimum Wednesday night, 75 noon Thursday 94.

Readings July 5, 1933--High, 89- low, 54. Joe-Lakina, 45, prominent in Kokomo Legion activities and caretaker of'the local Legion home, was instantly killed shortly after two o'clock Thursday morning, when the bus in which the color guard of the local post was returning from Terre Haute was sideswiped by a cattle truck at Manhattan, nine miles southwest of Greencastle. Six other members of the local color guard received injuries, none of which are believed critical, and several members of the Legion Auxiliary drum corps of Indianapolis were slightly injured. The Kokomo Legionnaires left here early Wednesday to participate in a parade in connection with the Legion's Fourth of July celebration at Terre Haute. The trip from Kokomo to Indianapolis was made in private cars, the journey was completed by commercial bus.

On the return trip the local men were fellow-passengers with members of the Indianapolis Auxiliary drum corps. Kuntz Describes Crash. According: to Robert Kuntz, first of the Kokomo Legionnaires to re FIREMEN CASES TO DEPEND ON APPEAL RULING Suits Sent Here from Peru Await Appellate Court Action. Disposition of the suits of two former Peru firemen for re-instatement and back pay, which are pending in circuit court here, will await a ruling by the Indiana Appellate court on several similar actions appealed from Miami county. Attorneys in the two cases have notified 'Judgei3rijwtliat thei fate of the suits will depend upon the outcome of the appealed cases.

The cases venued here were set for trial this month, one of them for Thursday and the other for next week. In the cases now before the Appellate court, the discharged firemen obtained judgments againat the city of Peru and the city from the verdicts. ippealed The case that had been set for hearing here Thursday was that of the state ex rel Fred Ellis against the city of Peru, the nine members of the city council acting as the board of public safety, Harry E. Worl as city clerk, and Arthur B. Anderson as city treasurer.

It says that the defendants notified him of his discharge Jan. 16, 1930, and serts be demanded a public hearing but that it was refused him. He alleges the sole reason for his dismissal was that he is a Republican, and the members of the council all are Democrats. He demands pay at the rate of $90 per month from the date of his dismissal to the date of entry of judgment. A similar suit, filed by Forrest Raver, is pending here.

The defense contends that Ellis and Raver were discharged for cause, and not for political reasons. They say that the two plaintiffs made no demand for a trial but accepted the discharge and quit the department. They assert that the plaintiffs knew the city had hired men in their, places but that they made no claim for until Jan. 27, 1931. compensation BODIES NOT FOUND LAKE IN MICHIGAN STILL HOLDS REMAINS OF TWO LOCAL DROWNING VICTIMS.

The bodies of Augustus Schaaf and Clarence Hamler, who were drowned In Elk Lake, Michigan, on Tuesday evening, had not been recovered from the waters of the lake at 11 o'clock Thursday morning, according to word received by wire by local relatives. The two drowning victims fell into the water from a foundered rowboat which had sprung a leak, during a sudden squall, and because of rough water were unable to remain afloat until aid came. The drowning was the first in the lake for more than twenty years. Considerable difficulty in recovering the bodies has been experienced due to the extreme depth of the lake at the point where the drowning occurred. Plerpont Hears News Columbus, July Makley and Harry Pierpont, under sentence of death in Ohio state penitentiary for the murder of Sheriff Sarber, Lima, learned today that they will not die a week today in the electric chairs.

The'news came to them in copies of Lima newspapers. They' were granted a stay of execution late Tuesday by the Ohio Supreme court. Miss Jesse Levy, Indianapolis at- came here to secure the court order, granted pending outcome of an appeal. turn to Kokomo, the accident occurred at 2:10 o'clock, after moEt of the occupants of the bus had gone to sleep. "It was all over before we knew Kuntz said, in describing the tragedy.

"I was suddenly awakened by the crash and found myself jammed into a corner of the 'bus with others stacked on top of me. Although I was not seriously hurt, I knew from the crash and from the looks of the bus that we had had a terrible wreck. "A cattle truck with a wide bed had crossed a bridge, just as we approached it, and had swung out to let another Legion bus, just ahead of us. pass. The wide bed of the truck sideswiped the bus, however, throwing us into the side of the bridge and practically cutting the big vehicle in two.

The sides of the bridge kept our wrecked bus from tumbling into the stream. "I managed to work myself out of the jam of injured passengers and climbed out through a. -window. I was only slightly scratched, and immdeiately set about to release some of those more seriously injured. Joe Instantly Killed.

"We found Joe's body in the wreckage of the front part of the car. He had ridden just behind the driver's seat and was undoubtedly killed instantly. His neck was broken and there were other terrible wounds which would have killed him at once. "Virgil Elliott was stunned and, I pulled him out through a window. He seemed in a daze for some time and we laid him on the ground at the side of the road.

Dr. Chancellor pretended not to be seriously hurt, but it was apparent that his back was badly wrenched. Maurice Tull, although suffering from an injured back, assisted in caring for the other injured and immediately completed a check up on members of the party. He later collapsed, however, and was found lying on the ground at the side of the road near by. Meade Dickason was probably the least hurt of any of the others, receiving minor cuts and bruises.

Paul Martin was badly cut and bruised." A considerable delay -was experienced in getting ambulance service from Greencastle. The body of Lakina was taken to a mortuary in Greencastle and -will be brought to Kokomo late Thursday. All of the injured were taken to the Greencastle hospital, where they were treated for injuries and shock. M. C.

Tull, who is a Tribune reporter, called the Tribune early Thursday morning, giving the first information of the tragedy. Word was at once relayed to Glen Hillis and Mayor Henry Quigley, who were special friends of Joe. The Mayor went at once to" the Legion home and placed at half mast the colors which Joe, as caretaker, had so often lowered in respect to others of his compatriots. Robert Kuntz, suffering only from slight cuts and bruises, reached Kokomo at 9 o'clock and; immediately set about to reassure the anxious families of the injured men. Others Also Injured.

W. W. Wooten, 21, of Sullivan, passenger on. the cattle truck figuring in the wreck, was critically injured in the crash and was reported by press services to be near death. Jaines Thompson, Shelburn, another rider, and Frank Heidenreich, driver, suffered cuts and bruises.

Five of the girls of the Indianapolis drum corps were more or less Injured, none of them critically. Those listed as injured were Cfiatfys on Page Two).

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