Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 110, Decatur, Adams County, 7 May 1934 — Page 1
KATHFR torvflht and and rising »W Tuesday uL northwest.
lOBLES KIDNAP SUSPECT IS ARRESTED
tar vote is lioiCTED IN kOAMSCOUNTY Putting In IS l icks l or Noini- | nations Today M( R \T OFFERS r<U I \l. SERS ICE K'jAlalcs wi re putting in KjWn:il licks today and E,nWiii.u their organizaE,r? i; (he hiit primary tomorrow. E foe v. vote was expected ran f rom 7.000 El J) in number, in the kK|i:il vote in 1032 Eutl.'X" l >oles were east. K2£ j,. Will Open at six a. in. >.. 12 hours candlelection board Ej er . "ill lie busy with the jot) in Ep fl I 1.-11111. rat lias made to gather the returns from the ■preci ids. Headquarters will in the Erwin build- ■ ooBvi," S nd street and able to attend the elecup town are in telephones 1000 or KaA receive the returns. centers in the Ky.fl races on the Democrat Kit th- sheriff's, clerk's, surveyor's and comnominations and the ion in the city. candidates feff ■' is. the largest num Hjerkr known to have entered ■tl'tl .1 race in this county. ■■ are six candidates for the nomination for mayor. ■ »|H!!.|raii candidates for K ■res are unopposed. K I Heavy In State BsSiq >l!~. May 7-(UP) One ~ votes in the hisis expected ill the tomorrow when candi.i m. state legisla K«y and township offices n will be the first Ke p: of the voters regisenacted by the 1933 ■slat; Kkollci.il reports from the counties indicate that far exceeds the cast in the record Htiu general election of 1932. open at 6 a. m. ami 6p. m One out of every is a candidate for office ■ cot ting of the votes is exbe delayed as a result. officials estimate that ire two or three days work to arrive at the especially in closeraces. interest will center on tion of candidates for 12 seats in the national representatives. Delethe Republican and Demstate conventions next will be nominated. ■ congressmen and the incumbents are seekA record break nt i,7 candidates are in 0 |Brial Services 1 | Held Here Sunday crowd attended the anservices for deceasheld .by the Loyal oral the Moose home in Sunday. dictator J M. Breiner and officers were in charge of work Charles Heare, FBt. read the list of deceased to the dead was delivM. F. Worthman, superineity srhools - Mr - Worthan inspiring address !■*' tribute to the memory of Music was furnished by ‘^B> r< >thy Troutnero— 1 By Is Final Taxpaying Date "as the last day for paying W ln ß installment of taxes at ■“ty treasurer’s office. was not so heavy at Vl until this morning a total 721.03 had been paid- The JBJ' due in the spring installV about $250,000. JM Saturday the amount colr.K t,a ' s $ 19 .532-98. The county Mr r 8 office will be open until this evening to accomotaxpayers.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY
Vol. XXXII. No. 110.
FERA Payroll For May Given Approval The local FERA office has received notice that the payroll for Adams county during the month of May has been approved. The pay roll is larger this month because of five paydays. The office wil be permitted to! spend s39on plus $684.93 which re-1 mained from April. This will not I allow additional men to go to wprk except In the cases of men quitting their Jobs. The approved pay roll for non-1 relief work in the county will ihe $1,143. This money will be expended upon men who are skilled and who ; are necessary in the completion of I the projects. Most of these will be | . linemen or plumbers. PORTLAND MEN i HELD IN JAIL ■ Two Men Arrested After Driving Into River Near Geneva ■ , | Ronald Betz, 42. and Kenneth I 11 Glassford, 26. both of Portland, are’ . I lodged in the Adams county jail, fol- . 11 lowing a peculiar automobile acci- . I dent at 8:'15 o'clock Sunday morn- . I ing near Geneva. The two men had been fishing in | the Wabash river, south of Geneva, i , and drove into the town for sandwhivhee. , | On their return trip to the river, I . Glassford was driving Betz’ auto. ’ . As they approached the Brice bridge, south of Geneva, Glassford • failed to make the curve and the . ear went over the embankment. I 1 through the guard rail and over an abutment. , Betz was thrown clear of the car.' which overturned. Glassford was . pinned under th* auto but through . the efforts of Betz and two men . fishing. John Stoner and Hobart > Miller, Glassford was released. .! Sheriff Burl Johnson was called. >I When the sheriff arrived at the! .; acene. Glassford was unconscious. , . | The two men were brought into De-1 t, catur but Glasstord revived and both men were taken to jail. Examination iby a physician dis- . closed that neither man was serI iously injured, although both sus- , tained numerous minor cuts and > ibruises1 Sheriff Johnson stated that; ■ I charges, probably of public intoxicaI tion, will be filed against both men. o Garden Lots Must Be Taken Up This Week ' William Linn, chairman of the FERA board in this county stated | today that there are a number of I I lots available for the unemployed ' ’ which must be taken this week. The '' lots are on the hospital ground and ! will be used for gardening. The ‘ I board has paid for the plowing and ’ i seeds will be furnished by the state, i j If they are not taken this week ' they will used in the common com- ’ munity garden. KIDNAPERS OF l BREMER NAMED Eleven Men Named As Participating In $200,000 Kidnaping ■| Chicago, May 7. — (U.RI Eleven 1 . men were involved in the kidnap- | ing of Edward G. Bremer and the Isusequent disposition of the $200.000 ransom money collected, it was . revealed today. ! The disclosure came wth receipt, of a certified warrant from St. Paul providing for the arrest of the ' eleven. In addition to the four suspects 1 held here in connection with the| ' case, accused of disposing of the ’ ransom, the warrant named: Frankie Wright. Ray Gray. Alvin Karpavics (alias Karpls). , Arthur R. Barker. Izzy Jones. John Doe. ’ Richard Doe. From this group investigators believed they would find the actual ! kidnapers of the wealthy St. Paul banker. John J. (Boss) McLaugh-1 ’ | Jin. his son. Jack. Phillip Delaney ’ and William E. Vidler are the four held for removal to St. Paul on ’ suspicion of having disposed of the ’ marked ransom money. The warrant, is a blanket one .(QQNTXNVfija £N TWO)
ktnte, National And Inlrrunilonal Nvwn
ELEVEN DIE IN PLANE WRECKS OVER WEEK-END — Five Airplane Crashes Over Week-end Bring Tragedies THREE WOMEN ARE AMONG VICTIMS — By United Press Eleven persons, three of them' women, were killed in five airplane j crashes over the week-end. An empty gasoline tank, causing a forced landing, brought death to i four persons In the wreck of a jit-j : ney plane at Houston, Tex. The .wreckage, with bodies of the pilot and passengers, was found after an I all night search. f The dead were Miss Gladys Wood. 20; Fred Burnett, 23; Bob IGlyn, 31. pilot, and Leroy Grandy, | Three persons burned to death near Fulton, N. Y„ when their plane fell 300 feet. Victims were Leon W. Holly, owner of the plane and pilot; Miss Irene Clark, 20, and John Parsons, 22. The men died as their monoplane ' lost a wing in midair near New Market, N. J. The pilot, Lowell Markwth, 39, and George J. Juntz were the victims. I Mrs. Gene May Johnson, IS, ! (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) FARMER DIES SUNDAY NIGHT Frederick Schlickman Dies At Home In Magley Last Night Frederick Schlickman, 81-year-old retired farmer of Magley, died at his home in Magley at 8:15 j o’clock Sunday night of complications. Mr. Schlickman had been ailing for the past month. He had resided in Magley since 1919, He engaged in farming for a number of years and van a member of the Magley Reformed | church. Mr. Schlickman was born in L,einen, Germany, on April 4. 1853, a son ’of Frederick and Elizabeth Kohlmerten Schlickman. He came to America in 1873. He was married twice. His first marrage was to Miss Lizetta Fruechte in 1878 and she preceded him in death in 1879. His second marriage was to Lizetta Worthman in April. 1880. and she ! survives. Four children were born to the union, two of whom are deceased. ■ A son. Albert, died in 1921 and a daughter, Matilda, preceded her father in death in 1916. Survivors include the widow, two sons. Otto Schlickman of Decatur and Henry of Fort Wayne; a brother, Ernest Schlickman of this city and a sister, Mrs. Fred Hackman of Fort Wayne, and four grand- | children. Funeral services will be held i Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 j o'clock, standard time, from the I home and at 2 o’clock at the Mag- ' ley Reformed church. Rev. David Grether will officiate and burial will be made In the church cemetery. The body will be returned to the home in Magley from the S. E. Black Funeral home late this atiternoon. o Commissioners Meet In Regular Session The board of Adams county com- ! tnissioners met today in the regular I May session. The day was spent in checking bills and claims and other routine ibusiness. The commissioners will not meet Tuesday because of election day. hut will reconvene Wednesday morning. o Wool Growers Benefit Through Cooperative Indianapolis, May 7 —Growers j who marketed their wool coopera- ■ tively through the national wool marketing corporation in 1933 in many instances received 150 to 200 per cent more in net returns that growers who sold outright, according to a report by the division of the farm credit administration.
Decatur, Indiana, Monday, May 7, 1931.
Mr. And Mrs. G. 7 Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Burk, 228 South First street, prominent residents of this eity for many years celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary at their home todayThe celebration was in the form of a family dinner at the noon hour and the children and their families were guests. Appointments in keeping with the anniversary prevailed in the decorations for the dining table and the entertaining rooms. Open house was held from three 1 to five o'clock in the afternoon and from seven to nine o’clock in the CONFERENCETO BE HELD HERE Evangelical Conference Here Next Year; Local Pastor Returned The annual meeting of the Indiana Conference of the Evangelical church will be held in Decatur in 1935, it was decided at the confer ence meeting which closed at Huntingburg, Sunday. The Decatur Evangelical church will be host to ' the large delegations which attend the conference each year. 1 The assignment of pastors of the ! conference Sunday afternoon closed the sessions held in Hunting- ' burg for the last several days. Rev. j M. W. Sundermann, pastor of the I local Evangelical church for the ! past six years, was returned to De- ’ catur. A request had been made jby the local church for his return. ■ i.X'o changes in pastorates in any lot the Adams County Evangelical I churches were announced. C. E. Honker of ths city, represented the local church as a delegate to the I conference. Ordinaton services were conducted by Bishop L. H. Segar Sunday morning and a mass meeting was held Sunday afternoon, the prin- ■ cipal address being given by Dr. l|G. B. Kimmel, president of the ; j Evangelical Seminary at Naperi ville. 111. Resolutions adopted by the con--1 ’ ference condemned the entry of J Christian nations into war, uni wholesome movies, unclean liter--1 f ature, child labor, Sabbash desecra- .! tion and the sale and consumption |of liquor. A protest against the I establishment of nudist colonies in Indiana will also be sent to Gov. 1 Paul V. McNutt by the conference authorites. ’! Assignment of pastors which will require changes were as follows: Atlanta, Francis Willard; Indianapolis Beville Avenue. F. G. Kueb- ' ler; Indianapolis Broadway, G. S. I Lozier; Kokomo First, C. E Geist; 'Logansport, O. A. Overholser; ' Philipsburg, C. W. Spangler; Portland. M. Horner; Rockport, supplied by Charles Kramer; Markle, Clyde Walters; Wapakonetta, F. J. jStedeke; Culver, R. L. Haley; Enterprise. W. I. Weyant; Hibbard ‘ circuit. Kendallville. Ambrose Aeg’erter; Kekanna, Glenn Baltzell; V - * (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) r —o ~ TOWNSHIP AID i REPORT GIVEN I Relief Expense In Washington Township Shows Decrease Poor relief expense in Washington township during the month of April showed a decrease of more than S4OO from the amount expended during March, according to the j monthly report made today by T. R.Noll. township trustee. A total of $986.42 was expended . during April, as compared with $1,406.97 in March. One hundred twenty-nine families were given relief, this number representing 427 persons. A total of 132 families were given aid during March. Six- ! teen single persons were helped during the month, a decrease of four from the previous month. Food supplies furnished the bulk of the relief expense during the ' month. A total of $299.75 was expended for food. Medical and deutal : care required $264.50 and fuel, $216.50. . Expenditures for the month of April were as follows: Food, $299.75; clothing, $17.54; fuel, $216.50; medical and dental . care, $264.50; hospitalization, $149.10; potatoes, $39.03; total, $986.42.
F. Burk Celebrate Anniversary Today evening. A number of frienile and relatives sent greetings and called at the Burk horfie during the day. The children of the honored couple, present at the dinner today were Mr. and Mrs. F W. Holhou.se iad laughters Betty and Martha Jane of Louisville. Kentucky; Mr. and Mr.s. H. W. Sutton, lA'kron, Ohio; Mr and Mrs. Avon Burk, daughter Eileen and son James, Mr. an I Mrs. Sim Burk, daughter Bar-1 bara and son Tom and Muss Vivian Burk of this city. Meeting Os Woman’s Club Open To Public The program meeting of the Wo- , man's Club to be held in the Library hall tonight, will be open to the public, it was announced today, and ; ‘ anyone not a member of the club I may secure tickets at the door for . 36 cents. Guest tickets cannot be used for the meeting. Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten of, ' Cndianapolls will be the guest speak-: 1 er at the meeting which marks the j i closing of the Woman's Club for j the present .season Mrs. Garten will review The March of Democracy” ’ by James Truslow Adams, and this > review will be of special interest to j I the men of the city. The literature department will “ have charge of the meeting. MOVIE ACTRESS AFTER DIVORCE r Third Marital Venture of ‘ Jean Harlow Is Reported Failure k . Hollywood, May 7. — (U.R) Jean s Harlow s third marriage has failed. i- i The platinum blond film star re-' i vealed today she has separated I 3 from her husband, Harold G. Ros--Ison, ace cameraman, with whom I she eloped eight months ago. She -! plans to seek a divorce, she said, f' "It is the only way out for both - 1 of us." the a tress told friends. "It -jis wrong for us to go on together. - when we obviously are uncongen-1 i ial. We simply are not meant for; a each other. II “But I will say Hal is a very fine ■ . man." a i Rosson, it was learned, has mov-, led out of their recently built; li Brentwood honeymoon home and Miss Harlow has gone to the home - I of her mother and stepfather, Mr.; - , and Mrs. Marino Bello. :. i Previously Miss Harlow had de- ’ ; i nied the much-rumored marital rift., ; The wedding of the film star and .- the camera technician, a quiet , >- young man of Scotch descent, fol-. i, lowed the suicide in September. ’ . 1932, of her second husband, Paul j Bern, prominent director. Bern Ishot himself three months after j 1 they were married, and left only a ; ; puzzling note in explanation. ■ | A few days after Bern's death, 1 Dorothy Millette, said to have been ; , a former wife, committed suicide by 1 jumping from a boat into the j Sacrament river. Mss Harlow's first husband was I Charles McGrew, 111, wealthy young Chicagoan to whom she was married Sept. 21, 1927. They were divorced Jan. 29. 1931. . o Standard Oil Co. Declares Dividend — ■’ Chicago, May 7—(UP)—Directors f of the Standard Oil Co., (’tad l toe day declared a cash dividend of 25 i vents a share, payable June 15 to ® j stockholders of record at the close ' < of business. May 15. , . MHMHHManaiRII< >1111 .mminmi#® ‘ The Daily , Democrat will hold open house in the ‘ Erwin Building South Second street Tuesday Night I, where the Election Returns will f be gathered and given to the public. j You are invited to attend. If you can't be there in person I call Phones 1000 and 1001.
Furwlabrd By I ultrd Prra«
SAMUEL INSULL ON LAST STAGE OF LONG TRIP Former Utility Magnate On Way To Chicago Under Heavy Guard INSULL IS FACING FOUR INDICTMENTS Aboard Pennsylvania Railroad Train, Chicago-bound, May 7. —< I(U.R) —Samuel Instill, heavily guarded and his route still secret, was on the last stage of his long journey from Turkey to Chicago today in (he custody of federal officers. 1 The former utilities executive said he was ready for the “fight : of my life” for vindication. i The government kept up the I secrecy surrounding return of I Insull by hinting that the party 1 in which he is a .prisoner might ! change trains en route to Chicago. They boarded a Pennsylvania I train which made a special stop at Princeton Junction, N. J., at 10:30 a. m. Four indictments, two federal and two in the state courts were I awaiting Insull's arrival in ChiI cago. The charges carry a total of ! 150 years imprisonment and fines I aggregating $250,000. The federal indictments, upon i which he was returned from Turkey, charge use of the mails to defraud initestorts in his utility pyramid and five illegal transfers of assets to preferred creditors in violation of the federal bankruptcy laws. The state indictments, which j will be held up until the govern- : ment has tried Insull. charge eraI bezzlement of $170,222.74 from the T funds of various units of the In- ' still combine. Unable To Pay j Chicago. May 7 — (U.R)—Samuel Insull will be unable to raise the $200,000 bond demanded by the government for his liberty pending trial and may lie forced to go to jail, his attorney told the United Press today. Floyd E. Thompson, former supreme court justice and chief attorney for Insull. said that $200,000 ’ was "absurd and absolutely out of the question” and that the most security that could be collected I among Insull's friends was $50,000 (mvTnnmn nv mcr v'tv’E) o Large Crowd At Legion Convention Bluffton, May. 7—(UP) —V. M. Armstrong. Indianapolis, and Mrs. Blanche Robineon, East Ctiieago were principal speakers at the anI nual fourth district lAtneriean Lel gion meeting here yesterday, i Nearly 5.000 Legionnaires attendi ed. ! I'n drum corps competition a Mun|cie outfit won first place; Angola, second; Warren, third, and Hartford City, fourth 14 ARE KILLER IN ACCIDENTS Traffic Accidents Claim Fourteen Lives In Indiana Over Sunday Indianapolis, May 7 — (U.R) — ] Week-end traffic accidents in Indiana claimed 14 lives, six of them in Indianapolis. Scores of others were injured on highways crowded with motorists seeking relief from midsummer heat. Cyril Kiser. 21, Mechanicsburg, and Miss Marie Daniels, 15, Middletown, were injured fatally last night when their automobile crashed into a utility pole and a tree on state road 41, north of the Henry county Memorial Park. One of those killed in Indianapolis was an unidentified man whose body was found by a merchant policeman on a south side street. Willis Sering. 65, died In city hospital after walking into the side of a moving automobile and Herman Byers. 61-year-old inmate of the county infirmary, was killed while w’alking toward the infirmary. Three negroes. Mrs. Garrett Skaggs, her infant daughter, and Benjamin Bridges, were killed I * (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE).
Price Two Cents
Fred Harmon Named Judge In East I nion John Drake, named judge of the election board of East Union precinct, will be unable to serve TuesI day because of a diphtheria quarantine. The appointment of Fred Harmon as judge was recommended by Otto Hoile, precinct committeeman. > Q HEAT RECORDS ; BROKEN SUNDAY . Sweltering Heat Brings Distress Throughout The Country , | Chicago, May 7.—(U.K)— Sweltering heat over the entire country added to the distress brought by five rainless weeks. Temperature records toppled • i everywhere yesterday as the mer.icury soared to 102 degrees in Phoenix. Ariz., an even 100 in Sioux I City, la., 98 in La Crosse, Wis.; 90 in Chicago and New York, and in- , ■ to the 80’s at almost all points reporting to the government weather ! bureau. Appreciable rains fell only in the > I lower Ohio and Mississippi valleys, I with’ the clouds drifting to the I southeast. The 100 degree mark lin Sioux City and 90 degrees in i Chicago were the highest tor that date since the weather bureau was 'established in 1890. Little rain, if any, was in pros- , I pect for the great rarm region be•l tween the upper Appalachians and , Rockies. Wheat and corn fields II shimmered with heat waves today, . i while even light breezes carried ! topsoil away in choking clouds. Threat to milk supplies of middlewestern cities was seen by Clifford V. Gregory, editor of a farm ‘ *7continued on page, fquhj DEATH CLAIMS MARY THATCHER 'I Mrs. John W. Thatcher Dies At Bobo Early > Sunday Morning Mary Jane Thatcher. 66. wife of John W. Thatcher and a resident ’ of Bobo, died at her home Sunday ; morning at 2:25 o'clock. ; Mrs. Thatcher was born September 25. 1867. a daughter of Martha i and Ezekiel Troutner. She was 1 1 married to John W. Thatcher on i December 24, 1889. To the union • i four children were born, three ot' ■ whom preceded their mother in ’ death. The husband, one daughter. Mrs. ', Margaret Waltke aud a grandson, i Johnny George Waltke survive. One ' granddaughter. Audrey Mary is dei ceased. Mrs. Thatcher was one of a fam--1 ily of four children. One brother. ' Levi Troutner preceded her in death. She is survived by John Troutner of Bellingham. Washington, and Sarah Troutner. A niece and a nephew, Mrs. Luther Funk, Decatur, and Eugene Troutner of I Bellngham, Washington, survive, I j together with a host of other rela- \ fives and friends. Funeral servees will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at 1 i the Bobo United Brethren church . with Rev. Kindle of Huntington in charge. Burial will be in the Bobo cemetery. S. E. Black of this city will have charge of the funeral, ! 0 r Class Os Sixteen i Make Communion Here A class of 16 boys and girls made lheir solemn Holy Communion at St. Mary’s Catholic church in this ' city Sunday morning. The mass was held at seven o’clock. The Rev. Father Joseph J. Seim- ’ etz said the mass and distributed ' communion to the class. The class ’ renewed baptismal vows and in the afternoon were enrolled in the scapular. ' Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock ' about 150 boys and girls and a nutn- ’ ber of adults will be confirmed by Rt. Rev. Bishop John Francis Noll j of Fort Wayne. Eighty Workmen Are Imprisoned I Muehlheim, Germany, May 7— 1 (UP) —Eighty workmen were impri--1 soneJ underground today when a 1 short circut set fire to » potash ’ mine in the towu ot Guggingen.
SUSPECT TELLS WHERE GIRL IS HELD CAPTIVE — Federal Agents Lead Posse Into Mexico In Hunt For Girl ACCOMPLICE IS NAMED MEXICAN ■ Nogales, Ariz., May 7—<U.R) Department of justice opera- | tives reported today that they had arrested the man I believed to have kulnaped June Robles, and that he had ’jtold them where the six-year ■Did daughter of Fernando Robles, wealthy rancher, l ’could be found. Officers said the suspect was i being held incommunicado, "some- ; I where in Sama Cruz county, Arii zona.” They said he was an Amer- . lean. He was reported to have . admitted hi* alleged connection • with the kidnaping and to have i named an accomplice. , The man was arrested, depart- | ment of justice operatives said, i on a clew furnished a week ago ; I Sunday by Mrs. Eva Coleman, a , I Fort Huachuea restaurant proprieI tor. Mrs. Coleman also was in ( ! custody. Department of justice agents led a posse of 25 peace officers into . . the Huachuea hills, across the I I border. , They had a working agreement ’ ! with Mexican officials permitting i ! them to cross the line. I Officers said the alleged accora- . i plice is a Mexican. The accomplice, officers said ! the suspect told them, is holding i the girl in a shack concealed in j the "bad lands" on the Mexican I side of the border. A desolate ! territory of box canyons, steep arroyos and rugged hills, covered ! with sage brush and grease wood, I extends for miles on both sides ! j of the border. I An El Paso, Texas, department ;of justice investigator, familiar ‘ with the border country, was said ■ to have captured the suspect. Federal agents who have been ' concentrated in Tucson, left by [ airplane immediately for Nogales to lead the hunt for June and the ■ j alleged accomplice. Since 12 of the federal investl- ■ I gators flew from Los Angel"# shortly after June was kidnaped - April 25. their plane has been i! kept warmed up for any eventu- ; i ality. i —— o i Local Man Held For Public Intoxication i. Dale Johnson was taken into cus- ' I tody Sunday by chief of police Seph- ’ us Melchi. He is lodged in the the ’i.Aidams county jail and will face i charges of public intoxication. o F. D. R. FAVORS 1 ‘ DIRECT LOANS fl President Favors Legislation For Direct Loans 1 To Industry 1 Washington, May 7. — (U.R) — 1 President Roosevelt favors legisla1 tion giving the Reconstructon Finance Corporation authority to make direct loans to industry. Chairman Jesse Jones of the RFC informed the house banking and curk I -ency committee tday. Jones, in a letter to Rep. Aiming , S. Prall, D„ N. Y„ said he was , authorized to make the statement s for the President. , "He especially wants the smalljer and medium sized industries . | given a full chance to survive on I i equal terms with the larger indus- , tries, Jones wrote. , Jones said he considered it ad- ( visahle to pass both the RFC direct loan measure and the Glass t bill which would give the Federal . reserve board authority to super- , vise such loans to industry. One I i measure would supplement the other, he said. He warned that unless the demand for loans from smaller Industries was met by the government 1 “our relief problems will continue to multiply.” A recent questionnaire by the I- Federal reserve board revealed 1 that at least $650,060,000 is con--1 sidered necessary to cover the needs of industry.
