Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 288, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1932 — Page 3
.ir-RIL 11, 1932-
HOOVER, HOUSE AT ODDS OVER PAY SLASHING Dissension Likely to Delay Prompt Action on Plans for Economy. By United Press WASHINGTON. April 11.—Sharp dissension between President Herbert Hoover and the house economy committee was apparent today ever their divergent plans for sweeping government pay cuts throughout the nation. Members of the committee said they intended to add a direct salary reduction “rider" to the legislative appropriation bill being reported out today. The fight centering around this “rider" grew out of the President’s “stagger employment system” and his five-day week for irregular government workers. Opposed to this was the committee’s plan for a direct 11 per cent pay cut on salaries above SI,OOO a year. The disagreement threatened to delay prompt action on the national economy program to pare $200,000,000 from the 1933 appropriations in order to balance the budget. The economy committee met in executive session this morning and expected at the afternoon session to decide one way or the other on the controversial salary cut phase of the plan. The net results of the all-day conference of committee members and the President Saturday can be summarized as follows: The committee learned that a number of its economy plans will be approved by the President if both houses of congress can be induced to accept them. It learned that the President is not walling even to discuss the plan it intended to offer for consolidation of war and navy departments. Furloughs Favored It learned that the President is willing to have incomes of federal employes reduced by some means, Although he prefers a plan of furloughs, without pay, rather than a salary reduction. While it is indicated that the President favored submitting to congress one bill containing all legislative proposals for cutting government expenditures, Chairman John McDuffie (Dem., Ala.) says the committee will continue framing a series of bills instead. Statements given out after the White House conference estimated at all the way from $125,000,000 to $200,000,000 the total savings to be effected under this general plan. The line of procedure to be followed by the house committee does not take into consideration the flat 10 per cent cuts being made in all appropriation bills by the senate appropriations committee. Members of the house group pointed out that the senate economy plan, by arbitrarily reducing the amount given bureaus for the coming fiscal year inevitably will mean a large number of dismissals from the government service. They prefer, instead, to distribute the economies and to reduce pay of all rather than to throw any workers into the ranks of the unemployed. Employes Fight Plan The items in this program which threaten to precipitate considerable controversy follow: Eleven per cent pay cuts for all employes from the President down, w'ith SI,OOO of each salary exempt; retirement of superannuated employes; and suspension of all promotions and all overtime pay. The National Federation of Federal Employes says it will oppose this “to the last ditch.” It prefers Hoover’s furlough plan, if some cut must be made, according to its secretary. Miss Gertrude McNally, but members of the house say they have been told by individual workers that the prefer the cut. Reduction of payments to veterans while hospitalized, and limitation of pay of emergency officers and of retired army and navy officers employed by the government. If veterans and government workers unite to defeat these two proposals they may be able to do so. Suspension for a year of all payments to states for vocational education except those for industrial rehabilitation. Twelve other propositions which were discussed were of minor importance and probably will encounter little opposition. ENGINEER IS SLAIN Martinsville Official Found Dead in Yard of Rink. By Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind., April 11. —More than a score of persons j were being questioned today as police sought a motive for the slaying here early Sunday of Frank Smith, 64. Martinsville city engineer. James Richardson, manager of a skating rink, where the slaying occurred. is under arrest. Richardson was said to have ejected Smith from the rink after the city engineer is alleged to have made advances to a woman. Smith apparently was struck on j the head with a heavy instrument j and death was caused by a cerebral hemorrhage. The body was found in the yard of the pavilion. First witnesses questioned ad- j mitted seeing Richardson eject j Smith, but denied seeing the episode that led to the killing. Smith has served as county sur- ' veyor and had built many roads { in Morgan county. He was named : city engineer two years ago. Survivors are the widow, four j sons, two daughters and four sisters. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon. Burial will be in Greenlawn cemetery, south of here. RATES~TALK scheduled The city’s compromise rate settlements with the water and power companies will be discussed in public Wednesday night when Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan addresses the central committee of South Side Civics Club at its monthly meeting at the Garfield park shelter house. Other speakers, in addition to Sullivan, will be Edward H. Knight, city corporation counsel; James E. Deery, city attorney, and Walter C. Rothermel and John F. White, members of the city’s utility rate committee.
Odd Jobs—No. 5 Totes Millions in His Truck; but Never Has Been Robbed
BY ARCH STEINEL Guarding h 0 .000,000 a year, or an average of $200,000 a week, sounds like a job full of color and adventure. One conjures up bandits lurking near the comers of buildings, with automatics leveled. Badges for heroism dangle in shooting It out with these bandits —dangle in dreams only. For the job of carrying and guarding $10,000,000 a year in Indianapolis isn't as exciting as selling the first pair of long pants to a boy in a clothing store. Iheodore Lich, 30, of 1531 Draper street, messenger and guard for the Brink’s Express Company,, has that job. He's carried more than $50,000,090 in pay rolls and store receipts in the last five years and never has been in a holdup. He's handled $50,000,000 and lose but S2O in that time. “It was a S2O pay check, and out of my own pocketbook it had to be made good,” Lich said. nun LICH is probably the only man in the city, who can if he desires, work on the city streets in his undershirt in the summertime. Os course, he's not literally on the street when he’s in his “skivvy” top-piece, but instead is in j, he company's armored truck, incased in steel. The steel compartment which serves as Lich’s home during his work days reaches 115 degrees in temperature in summer. “Does it get hot in there? Say, as hot as blazes, and in winter Jt gets just that much colder,” Lich explains. "You see a heater can’t be placed in the truck because of fire danger to the currency we haul, nor can an electric fan be used in hot weather. So it's just boil or freeze," he said. But taking money to bank, collecting store receipts, isn’t all of Lich’s job, for, on top of being able to guard the money, he must know how to count change accurately and quickly, and use an adding machine. nun EACH armored truck carries between SI,OOO and $2,000 in small change to aid merchants in outlying sections and save them trips to banks for that change. And these days, rife with “speakeasies” and political henchmen, are hard on embryonic guards and messengers for armored pay roll cars. For one can not take Lich’s job unless one is married, or, if single, must live at home. Political wheelhorses or persons addicted to jobs dependent on the party emblem are barred as guards. If you so much as speak kindly of a “speakeasy” or frequent a poolroom, you’re one of the unwanted. Men with matrimonial difficulties get “thumbs down” if they seek his job, and you must live as Lich has at least five years in Indianapolis. He is bonded for $25,000. tt n No, it’s hardly that. It’s just my job. Os course, when I first went to work, my wife used to worry sometimes if I came home late, but now she never does. “But I’ve got my boy fooled. He thinks his daddy is a policeman, because he wears a uniform. He brags to the neighbor children and you can't convince him otherwise.” declared Lich as he swung into the armored car for another ride with big money.
ROOSEVELT'S STAND SCORED BY HURLEY
New York Governor Has No Real Program, G. 0. P. Editors Are Told. Indiana Republican editors had returned to their desks today, revivified in their Republicanism after the two-day meeting here which ended with a banquet Saturday night, at which Patrick J. Hurley, secretary of war, spoke. A total membership of 1,056 attended the dinner, according to Samuel E. Boys of Plymouth, retiring president of the organization, who introduced Hurley. Declaring Hoover is the man who kept this nation from the dole, Hurley praised him as the outstanding economist of the world today. “All the relief measures proposed by the President merely are emergency plans, not intended to be permanent,” he said. Roosevelt Assailed Declaring re-election of President Hoover is a national necessity, Hurley assailed Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt for the attack he made on (he Hoover “nonpartisan” economic program in an address Thursday. “Governor Roosevelt has added himself to the critics of that program who have no program of their own worthy of consideration,” Hurley said. “If Governor Roosevelt had an economic program for this nation, why didn’t he submit it to his fellow Democrats who control the house of representatives instead of waiting until they enacted the most important provisions of the Hoover nonpartisan economic program?” Cites War on Depression Turning his attention to the President’s record, Hurley said: “Depression has proved a most stubborn foe. Like the multipleheaded hydra, no sooner is one head of the beast chopped off when another grows out, "The President has attacked depression on a hundred fronts, but no sooner does he stop the ravages of one attack upon our civilization and our American standards of living when another assault swoops down from some other hostile sector.” Hurley declared the President “led in organization of a movement to stimulate home building and home ownership and called out of hoarding nfiliions of slacker dollars and put them back Into circulation.’' j
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Messenger Lich in ihc doorway of his $10,000,000 stateroom.
LEGION’S STAND IS LAUDED BY HURLEY
War Secretary Declares Organization Should Be Commended. Praise for the American Legion's opposition to demands for immediate payment of bonuses to World war veterans was expressed Sunday by Patrick Hurley, war secretary, before his return to Washington, after addressing Republican editors of the state. Hurley made a brief address at the annual conference of Indiana department post officers. “The legion is to be commended on its patriotism in putting interests of the country as a whole before selfish interests,” he remarked, referring to the legion pledge not to ask bonus payments now, made at the national convention last fall. National guard officials received word that the army plane bearing the war secretary back to Washington was forced down at Richmond by bad weather, and the secretary continued by train. Plans for sending 600 Indiana Legionnaires to the annual covention in Portland, Ore., in September were told by Fred A. Wiecking, Bluffton, past department commander. Other matters discussed at the departmental meeting included plans for the sale of poppies May 28, and the state convention in Kokomo, July 30 to Aug. 2. Proposal for a law permitting adoption by private families of children in the soldiers’ and sailors’ orphans’ home at Knightstown was discussed by Elmer Sherwood, Linton, child welfare chairman.
ILL WITH PARROT FEVER City Nurse Stricken With Unusual Disease in California. Condtion of Miss Daisy Gentry, a nurse, ill of parrot fever at her home, 1505 North Delaware street, was satisfactory today, according to the attending physician. She was stricken with the disease, known to physicians as psittacoses, after attending two patients at Pasadena, Cal., one of whom died. This is believed the first case in Indianapolis.
MELLETT OUSTER SUIT PART DENIED
Former Anderson Cop Says Use of Name Was Not Approved by Him. By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., April 11.—One of six persons whose names appear on a petition filed Saturday in Madison circuit court asking impeachment of Anderson's mayor, Jesse H. Mellett, declare she will not be a party to the action and that use of his name was without authority. He is James McGuire, who resigned as a policeman after Mellett had ousted Dr. Henry W. Harrison as a safety board member. Harrison, McGuire and Mellett are Democrats. Willard Rector, a retired business man, is another Democrat whose name appears as a plaintiff. Three Republicans signed the complaint against Mellett. They are James W. Bailey, building supply dealer; Charles E. Miller, wealthy tire manufacturer and former safety board member, and Harold Matthew, manager of a lumber company. Bailey served as foreman of the grand jury for the January term of circuit court. The mayor is charged with drunkenness on various occasions, including Feb. 10, 1931, when it is asserted he appeared in the state senate chamber while intoxicated. It also is alleged -Mellett has appeared drunk in his office here and in offices at the courthouse. Action is based on a 1026 statute. Removal of the mayor Is asked.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: J. C. Lackey, Oaklandon, Ind., Whippet sedan, 18-961. from Senate avenue and Market street. Alvin Kendrick, 429 West Michigan street, Oakland coach. 66-895, from in front of 429 West Michigan street. Edgar Snyder, 3839 Spann avenue, Graham-Paige sedan, 65-721, from 200 East Washington street. Dodge sedan. 302-916, from Rushville, Ind. R. D. Bailey, 402 Trowbridge street, Ford coupe, 57-663, from Senate avenue and Market street. Inez Lynn, 648 South Illinois street. Ford Sedan, from Wilkins and Meridian streets. Donald Yount, Greenwood, Ind. Chevrolet coach, 253-258, from Whiteland, Ind. Colley Avenue Motor Sales Company, Nash coupe. M-1921, from vacant lot at 3224 East Tenth street. College Avenue Motor Sales Company, Ford sedan, M-1921, from vacant lot at 3224 East Tenth street. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Frank Ford, 824 North Tacoma avenue, Buick couDe, found at Sixtv-third street and Carrollton avenue. Martha Parks, 2809 East Riverside drive, Chrysler sedan, found at 2809 East Riverside drive. Jack Wims, 2423 Martindale avenue, Oakland roadster, found in fr&nt of 144 West Nineteenth tsreet. Mrs. Celie Smith, 2605 North Oxford street. Ford roadster, found at Twentyeighth and Oxford streets. Robert Bailey, 402 Trowbridge street, Ford coupe, found at 331 West Ohio street. Ford tudor sedan, no license plates, no certificate of title, found in the first alley east of Burton avenue between Udell and Twenty-eighth streets. M. P. Griffin, Chicago, 111., Chevrolet coach, found at Senate avenue and Washington street. Norman Dietz. 3015 North Meridian street, apartment 101. Auburn coupe found at 3015 North Talbot street. HIT LEGIONIuSTER Robison Post Members Go to Ecker’s Defense. Using the detailed manner of story-telling in the days of King Arthur and his knights with subtle word shafts in place of lances, seven members of the Bruce P. Robison post of the American Legion attacked, in pamphlet form, the ousting of John R. Ecicer of Linton as service officer of the legion department of Indiana. The pamphlets were issued Sunday at the annual spring conference of post officers of the legion in the Antlers. It told of the alleged “railroading” of Ecker from office and the naming of Harry Hall of Marion as his successor.
d# MR I 'W*?
Jesse H. Mellett
Hearing will be held April 19 before Circuit Judge Lawrence Busby. Mellett, who with Mayor George R. Dale of Muncie was indicted recently by a federal grand jury at Indianapolis on a liquor conspiracy charge, has been ill since October, 1931, when he was stricken with paralysis while at the statehouse in Indianapolis. The impeachment petition follows a bitter fight among Democratic factions for the office of city controller.
AUTO ACCIDENT DEATH TOLL IN COUNTY AT 26 William Kuegelmann Hurt Fatally; 16 Injured in Score of Crashes. One person was killed, sixteen persons were injured, three drivers were arrested and seven motorists are sought as a result of more than a score of traffic accidents during • the week-end, according to police. Thrown from the seat of a coal i truck at Tenth street and Belmont avenue, early Sunday, William Kuegelmann, 19 - of 1438 Wcst Court S street, was injured £atally. Kuegelmann’s death raised the county’s 1932 traffic toll to 26. The truck in which he was riding was being driven by George Wise, 25, of 1445 Saulcy street, who, with Keueglmann, was employed by the Belmont Coal Company. Struck by Taxi Struck by a taxi early today aCollege avenue and Forty-ninth street, Hardin Wright of Bloomj ington, Ind., was injured critically. Police did not arrest Harry TANARUS, Skinner, 43, of 3433 East Tenth street, driver of the cab. Wright is in city hospital. Mrs. H. J. Thompson, 670 West drive, Woodruff Place, was injured j internally when the auto in which i she was riding, driven by a chauffeur, overturned op state road 37, two miles south of the city, Sunday afternoon. Theodore Thompson, 20, her son, and Lucian Dunbar, 525 Sutherland avenue, a third passenger, were cut and bruised. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bowen, 1220 Wooalawn avenue, were injured severely Sunday night when Bowen drove his car into a safety zone guard at East and Washington I streets in order to avoid collision with another car. Both were cut and bruised on the head and face. Street Car in Crash When the car in which thdy were riding was struck by a street car at Olney and Eleventh streets, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Wiles, 3302 East Thirty-third street, incurred head and body lacerations. Mrs. Maria Collins, 47, 124 East New Work street, and Mrs. Alvin Lauely, 521 North Alabama street, incurred severe body bruises when the car in which they were riding crashed into another at Illinois and North streets, Saturday night. After his car crashed into a safety zone at East and Washington streets, early Sunday, Ray Boyd, 26, of 136 West Eleventh street, was arrested for drunkenness and driving while drunk. He was cut and bruised. Ft. Wayne Woman Hurt Mrs. S. Rombke, 63, of Ft. Wayne, incurred a broken..arm and body lacerations in an auto crash Sunday night at Brookville road and Arlington avenue. In a collision at the National and Holt roads, early Sunday, John Wicker Jr., 2101 West Walnut street, was cut on the face. He is in city hospital. When he lost control of his car and it crashed down an embankment and overturned at Burdsal parkway and Rader street, Saturday night, Howard Price, 25, of 2502 North Harding street, was injured seriously. Others injured in crashes are: Mrs. Minnie Curtis, 40. of 2630 Cornell avenue, cuts on the face and legs: Mrs. Margaret Brody. 62, of 610 North California street, ankle injuries, and George De Fabis, 5, of 3035 Madison, avenue, body bruises., Charges of drunken driving were placed against Dale Smith, 20, of Franklin, Ind., and Emmett Smith. Negro. 34. of R. R. 14, Box 125, after traffic mishaps. G. 0. P. EDITORS FROWN ON DRY REFERENDUM Vote Down Proposal at Closing Session of State Meeting. Despite repeated statements of Senator James E. Watson, titular head of their party, in favor of a referendum on prohibition, members of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association refused and voted down a resolution to this effect at their closing business session Saturday. Instead, they inserted a resolution reaffirming their “belief in constitutional government.” The editors declared in favor of a special session of the general assembly for enactment of tax relief legislation if it could be confined “to emergency needs and an agreed program. Ray Seller of Franklin was elected j treasurer, to succeed Harry Thomp- j son of Versailles, who becomes sec-1 ond vice-president, and A. H. Smith of Crawfordsville was advanced from j first vice-president, succeeding Samuel E. Boys of Plymouth. Arthur K. Remmel of Ft. Wayne is the new first vice-president. JACK HORNER IS RAIDED Jack Horner was ousted from his corner Sunday by police who raided his home at 628 East Michigan street, apartment 11, and’today he faces charges of blind tiger and keeping a gaming device. The raid was made by Sergeant Lester Jones and squad. They report seizure of 272 quart bottles of home brew, twenty gallons brewing, eight cans of malt syrup, two tengallon kegs, two jars, hose, a capper , ; and a slot machine.
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Killers Sought
su-v-.. < ■ ... 1,
George (Hots) Gardner
AUTOIST PULLS TRICHN THIEF Turns Into Lighted Garage to ‘Ditch’ Holdup Man Taken for a ride in his own automobile early today, Morris Bornstein, 1244 Union street, was robbed of a billfold containing sl9 by a young man who escaped after Bornstein drove into a lighted garage. Bornstein told police that as he stopped the car in front of his home the' bandit slid into the seat beside him and menacing him with a revolver, commanded, "Drive on.” After driving two blocks, Bornstein was robbed and the trip continued to 2921 Bluff road, where Bornstein swung the car into a lighted garage and stopped the motor. The bandit fled as Alvin Holt and Alford Rosebrock approfehed the car from the house at the Bluff road address. Two of three Negroes reported caught in the act of holding up two men in an automobile service station early Sunday suffered slight wounds when three squads of police fired after closing in on them. Officers said they saw Edward L. Maze, 50, proprietor of the station, at 1841 North Capitol avenue, with their hands raised. Two of the Negroes held revolvers and the third stood nearby. The three took refuge in a washroom and fired two shots, and the same number was fired by the officers. The Negroes then surrendered. They are George Tabor, 20, of 2436 Martindale avenue, shot under the right arm; Norman Jennings, 20, of 1628 North Arsenal avenue, and Jesse Woolridge, 2530 Martindale avenue, wounded in the left leg.
GALL ANNUAL PARLEY Jewish Federation to Hear Hadassah Pioneer. The Jewish Federation of Indianapolis will hold its twentyseventh annual meeting Thursday night at 8 at Kirshbaum Center, with Dr. I. M. Rubinow of Philadelphia, prominent physician and social worker, as guest speaker. Dr. Rubinow, organizer of the first Hadassah unit to serve in Palestine, will talk on “World-Wide Social Welfare.” G. A. Efroymson, federation president, will give his annual report, as will H. Joseph Hyman, executive director, and Joseph M. Bloch, chairman of the nominating committee. .The committee will place in nomination the following to replace directors whose terms expire: Dr. R. A. Solomon, Mrs. Louis Wolf, Ernest Cohn, Saul Solomon, Edward A. Kahn, Mrs. J. A. Goodman and Jacob H Wolf. The directors will serve for a three-year period Samuel Mueller is chairman of the annual meeting’s committee on arrangements, assisted by Rabbi Milton Steinberg, Miss Frances Mazur and Mrs. Milton Steinberg, secretary. SOVIETS KILL KOREANS By United Press TOKIO, April 11.—The Chientao, Manchuria, correspondent on Nippon Dempo news service reported today that Soviet troops killed twenty Koreans on the KoreaSiberia border when the natives attempted to cross into Russian territory.
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iGUN BATTLE IS VIEWED HIJACK KILLING CLEW Search for Gardner Slayer Turns to Fight Scene Near Greencastle. Search for killers of George Holland (Hots) Gardner, 25, of 225 South Holmes avenue, turned to near Greencastle today on information of a gun battle between occupants of two cars there Friday night. Frank Day, a farmer, said occupants of two cars exchanged shots near his home late Friday night. He told Sheriff Alva Bryan that a man, apparently wounded, was carried from one car to the other after the shooting. Cap Found at Scene Gardner's body was found in his bullet-riddled roadster in front of his home early Saturday. Bryan informed Indianapolis police that ; Day had turned over to him a cap i the farmer found near the shooting i scene. i The only Indianapolis clew uni covered today was the finding of a 30-30-caliber rifle near Gardner's home today. Th gun was found ( | by Fred Miller, 15, of 318 South ; Addison street, in the rear of a vacant house at 210 South Addison ! street. The weapon had been hurled from an automobile, police believe, j Confident of Success Detectives, although guarding information closely, said they expect- : ed to solve the murder mystery 'soon. Efforts to locate a Calumet City J (111.) gangster, known as “Mickey,” who accompanied Gardner and was wounded in the hijacking attempt, ; failed thus far. according to Detective Chief Fred Simon. Gardner’s wife. Ruby, and three i other persons in the Gardner home when the crime was discovered. { were to be questioned today by detectives. Others arrested were Mrs. Effie Wright and Richard Rogers, 28, roomers at the Gardner home, and Harry McQuinn, 26, of 2724 Shelby street. Mrs. Gardner was released Saturday on her own recognizance. Served 60 Days Simon said records show Gardner served a sixty-day term on the state farm in 1923 for vehicle taking. In February, 1926, while serving another term, Gardner escaped from ! the farm, to be captured two days j later and sentenced to two to five years in the Indiana reformatory, a term which he served. Autopsy by deputy coroners Saturday disclosed that three .45-caliber bullets pierced Gardner’s body. Arrangements for the funeral have not been made.
PURSE-STEALING NETS S6O OVER WEEK-END Negro Youth Is Nabbed by Cops; Nine Women Lose Pocketbooks. Nearly S6O was the loot in purse stealing over the week-end, nine thefts having been reported to police. * Four purses were stolen at the home of R. J. Newman, 46 Jenny lane, owned by his guests. Losers were Mrs. Lol Carpenter, Mrs. Helen Smith and Mrs. J. A. Walker, Muncie, and Mrs. C. Van Isiman, Chicago. The purses contained $37.50. Other losers were Mrs. Osceola Small, 976 Udell street, mother of Patrolman Jack Small; Mrs. Helen Williams, 1710 North New Jersey street; Mrs. Helen Hunter, 714 East Twenty-third street; Mary Brown, Negro, 313 Minerva street, and Casalina Sweeney, Negro, 717 North Cap - itol avenue. I%ay Goodman, 17, Negro, 2470 Cornell avenue, was arrested in connection with the theft from Mrs. Hunter. Chico Marx Hurt in Auto Crash By United Press HOLLYWOOD, April 11.—Chico Marx, one of the four Marx brothers, comedians, was recovering today from painful injuries sustained in an automobile accident Saturday. He received a fracture of his right knee, a broken rib and lacerations. I llJkxficL-) | I HOME Os THOUGHTFUL SERYICFF j ! FUNERAL DIRECTORS I lI6I9N.ILUNOISST. 1122 UNION St ( [TALBOTJta76_ DR£XEL 2SSt j
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