Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 293, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1932 — Page 1

LIGHT BURGLAR KILLED TRYING TO FLEE HOME Seventh Bullet From Gun of Householder Ends Marauder’s Career. VICTIM UNKNOWN NEGRO Leather Buyer, Awakened by Flashing Beam, Empties Pistol. Death came swiftly today to the “flashlight burglar.” He died, his heart pierced by a bullet fired by Rudolph Grosskopf, 31, of 4847 Carrollton avenue, whose home he entered through a bathroom window. The unidentified dead man is a Negro, about 25. Grosskopf, sleeping in a room with his wife and 8-year-old son, was awakened about 2:30 this morning, he told police, and saw the beam of a flashlight playing about the room.' He called to the Negro holding the light: ‘ What arc you doing here?” x Crawls Toward Door There was no reply. The Negro began crawling to a door leading to the bathroom. Reaching under ! his pillow, Grosskopf grasped a .32caliber automatic pistol and began firing. As the intruder reached the door, the seventh bullet fired by Gro6.skopf struck him in the left side between the fifth and sixth ribs and pierced the heart. The Negro dragged himself to a washstand, climbed on it and tried to escape through the window he had raised to enter the house, but tell to the floor. ‘‘Are you going to arrest me, doc?” Grosskopf inquired of Dr. John A. Salb, deputy coroner. ‘‘You Did Good Job” ‘‘No. You did a good job,” Salb responded. The body was sent to city morgue. The Negro weighs about 140 pounds and was 5 feet 8 inches tall. There are no identifying marks on his clothing. He wore three cotton gloves on each hand and his footgear was rubber-soled shoes. On his person was found a small black purse containing $1.28, a silver table knife and a pawn ticket. Marks of the knife were on the sill of the bathroom window in the Grosskopf home, police said. Pass Through Walls The six bullets which missed the Negro passed through three walls of the home, police said. Grosskopf is a buyer for Nutz <te Grosskopf: leather dealers, 107 South Pennsylvania street. Activities of the “flashlight burglar” started early Wednesday. The Grosskopf home was the sixth he entered. Early Thursday he fled from the home of H. C. Asher, 1629 North Temple avenue, having been frightened when the bell on a baby’s walker tinkled as he bumped against it.

HOGS MOVE UP 5 CENTS AS WEEK’S TRADE ENDS Cattle Market Nominal; Vealers Off Half Dollar. Firm demand at the city yards this morning sent hog prices up 5 cents on mast classes. The bulk, 100 to 350 pounds, sold for $3.75 to $4.30; early top holding at $4.35. Receipts were estimated at 3,000; holdovers, 222. Cattle were nominal on small receipts of 50. Vealers sold off 50 cents at $6 down. Calf receipts were 100. No sheep were available this morning for trade. A few lightweight hogs at Chiago were weak to 10 cents lower than Friday's average; 160 to 180 pounds sold for $4.35; bidding around 10 cents lower or $3.60 to $3.85 for 250 to 320 pounds. Receipts were 7,000, including 6,000 direct. Holdovers were 4,000. Cattle receipts were 300; calves. 100; market steady. Sheep 9,000, steady. Arson Suspect Acquitted By United Press PORTLAND, Ind., April 16. George Bowers was acquitted on a charge of arson by a jury which deliberated two and one-half hours Friday night. Bowers was charged with setting fire to his home, in which the body of his wife was found. He was indicted only last month, although the fire occurred on March 12, 1931. Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m 49 8 a. m 51 7 a. m 49 9 a. m 51

GENUINE USED CAR VALUES LISTED ON PAGE 12

The Indianapolis Times Mostly cloudy tonight and Sunday, probable showers; not much change in temperature.

VOLUME 43—NUMBER 293

Clock. Fixes Time of Blast

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A time clock found in the debris of the $6,500,000 Columbus, 0., state office building that was wrecked by an explosion, fixes the time of the mysterious blast at 2:42 p. m. The clock had been blown from the wall and found by Assistant Fire Chief Clarence Osborn, shown above, after firemen fought a three-hour blaze following the explosion. Eight workmen were killed, sixty hurt in the blast that caused $1,200,000 damage to the nearly completed structure.

DEMANDS DARROW IDENTIFY SLAYER

State Wants Killer Named Before Further ‘Honor Insanity’ Pleas. BY DAN CAMPBELL United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1932. bv United Press) HONOLULU, April 16.—Clarence Darrow was confronted by prosecution demands for an immediate showdown in making the slayer of Joe Kahahawai when he rose today fro ma sick bed to resume defense of four accused Americans. The murder trial, interrupted at a crucial point by the aged attorney’s illness, was to continue today in a conference of judge and opposing counsel, with Darrow facing one of the most important battles of his case. John Kelley, fiery territorial 6prosecutor who seeks life sentences for Mrs. Granville Roland Fortescue, her navy officer son-in-law, Lieutenant Thomas H. Massie, and seamen A. O. Jones and E. J. Lord, announced he will resist further defense testimony only until the actual slayer in brought into the open. Aimed at Massie The demond was aimed chiefly at Lieutenant Massie, whose graphic story of a brutal attack on his wife by a gang of island hoodlums —one of whom allegedly w 7 as Kahahawai —has been the only mitigating evidence. When Lieutenant Massie is recalled to the stand he is expected to relate for the first time what happened last January when Kahahawai was spirited away from this ancient judiciary building and a bullet fired into his heart, * thus revealing who did the shooting. Kelley’s point, however, was that Darrow first must name the slayer, if Lieutenant Massie is to be permitted to bring the Ala Moana case —as the attack on Mrs. Thalia Fortescue Massie is known—further into this trial. Darrow’s announcement that an insanity plea would be brought up on behalf of the actual slayer spurred Kelley in his demands. "We want to know for whom insanity is being pleaded,” Kelley said. “If this is admitted, we presume it automatically would disclose the slayer.” Hundreds Disappointed Darrow, stricken suddenly Thursday afternoon by a slight digestive ailment after finishing a swim at Waikiki beach, disappointed hundreds who had waited at the courthouse all night to hear Lieutenant Massie’s closing testimony. • The elderly counsel—he will be 75 Monday—was attended by Lieuten-ant-Commander J. E. Porter, navy physician from Pearl Harbor, who reported Friday night Darrow was progressing • rapidly and would be ready to appear today. He was principally in need of rest, Dr. Porter said. There were few dry eyes in the courtroom when recess Thursday halted Lieutenant Massie’s anguished story of his wife's ordeal at the hands of her abductors She was permanently disfigured by brutal blows, and twice submitted to corrective operations, he said A startled courtroom, waiting for Darrow to claim insanity for the defendants, leaned forward when Lieutenant Massie, his face a picture of agony and despair as he described the atfack, cried, ‘‘it had e strange effect on my mind”

GAMBLE IN STOCKS TO F

BY ROBERT A. ERWIN United Press SUff Correspondent Raleigh, n. c„ April 16. Gray-haired Judge John H. Harwood of the North Carolina superior court and his 27-year-old daughter Lola, are behind prison bars today—because the daughter speculated in stocks to finance a romance, and the distinguished father altered court records to save her from disgrace. They were sentenced at the termination of a dramatic court late Friday—a scene thal

Free Rides Free bus service is being given today, from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., to accommodate shoppers who wish to visit West Washington street stores. The bus will ply between Monument Circle and Missouri street, carrying a sign designating the stores which are giving the service. Free bus rides will be a regular Saturday feature, the stores announce.

ORIENT CRISIS UP AT GENEVA New Disarmament Scheme Proposed by Stimson. By United Press GENEVA, April 16.—Distinguished statesmen from every part of the world gathered in Geneva again today ot undertake decisive action on two vital international issues—disarmament and the far eastern conflict. Outstanding was the first United States secretary of state to visit the League of Nations home—Henry L. Stimson. His cordial conference in Paris Friday with Premier Andre Tardieu and other French government leaders was considered a great encouragement tdward closer collaboration. Stimson will not supercede Hugh S. Gibson as head of the American delegation. The United States has no direct part in the league committee of nineteen which was summoned to meet again this afternoon to consider the Chinese-Japanese controversy. But the American secretary, nevertheless, was the center of greatest speculation. It was understood that Stimson proposed anew disarmament scheme to Tardieu at Paris, providing for application of different plans for arms reduction in different zones of the world. This scheme, known as hemispheric disarmament, was a compromise between the opposing French apd American theses. MADE-WORK INCREASES \ Home Improvement Campaigns Under Way in 92 Cities. By United Press WASHINGTON, April 16.—Home improvement and modernizing campaigns are in progress in ninety-two cities and contemplated in 142 others. The commerce department estimates that by the end of June the total expenditures for labor and materials resulting from these campaigns will be about $25,000,000. JEWISH PASSOVER NEAR Observance Will Open in Synagogues of City Wednesday. Observance of Passover, celebrating the deliverance of Jews from bondage in Egypt, will be held by Indianapolis Jews starting with services in the synagogues Wednesday afternoon. The celebration will continue a week.

would have provided a thriller for just such a stage production as, say, “Coquette,” or “The Trial of Mary Dugan.” man HIGH state officials and members of the bar, for years associates of Judge Harwood, were gathered in the Wake county courtroom. The daughter, known to all of them as a trusted clerk of the department of revenue, cried and hid her face in a handkerchief as

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1932

FLARE LIKELY LINDY SIGNAL TO KIDNAPERS Light Visible for Miles Set Off at Top of Sourland Mountain. SIGNIFICANCE IS DENIED Unusual Activity Marks Night on Flier’s Estate at Hopewell. BY BATES RANEY United Pres* Staff Correspondent HOPEWELL, N. J., April 16.—A magnesium flare lighted early today at the home of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh atop Sourland mountain, illluminated the countryside for miles, and led observers to believe it was a signal having a significant bearing on efforts to retpm the flier’s kidnaped son. State police at Trenton said that a state trooper stationed at the Lindbergh home had found the flare Friday. It was described as being an old one, a “dud.” The trooper decided to test it, so shortly after midnight he took it into the yard and lighted it, police said. An aviation expert at Hopewell said the flare was of the type designed for parachute landing at night, costing from SSO to $75 each. He estimated it could have been seen from the air sixty miles distant and from the ground for twenty miles. The flare burned for five minutes, throwing out an intense white light which was made more conspicuous by the elevation of the Lindbergh home. Speculate on Signal Newspaper men watching beyond the deadline set up by the New Jersey state police reported no planes could be heard overhead, but one could have been beyond hearing and still within sight of the flare. Speculation also centered on whether some motor car might have been waiting in a nearby road for a signal. Finally, Colonel H. Norman Schwartzkopf issued a statement to answer the hundreds of calls from farmers around Hopewell. “The flare,” Schwartzkopf’s bulletin said, “was an old magnesium light which it was thought would not burn any more. It burned, however, but there Is ho significance.” An airplane bearing the number NV-9746 was seen flying low over Hopewell early Friday night. The lighted flare climaxed a night, of more than usual activity at the Lindbergh home. Several visitors were admitted.

Night of Much Activity Among the late arrivals was a small coupe carrying two men. The License plates on the car were covered with cloths. One of the occupants resembled Dr. John F. Condon, “Jafsie” negotiator. Shortly before the coupe appeared, a girl who identified herself as Grace Gray, 28, of Minneapolis, Minn., a friend of the colonel’s mother, was stopped by troopers who telephoned the home. Miss Gray was permitted to enter immediately. Her visit was said to have no connection with the kidnaping search. The flare was set off five minutes after she departed. Earlier in the night Samuel Krashow and Martin Bernstein, operatives of the Central Detective bureau of Brooklyn, drove up to the estate. They said they had an appointment with Lindbergh, but when asked about their connections with the case, Bernstein remarked cryptically: ‘‘Our activities are of such a delicate nature that to discuss them might cause serious injury or death of the child.” In the metropolitan area Condon’s activity continued. Colonel Henry Breckinridge, Lindbergh’s legal advisor, was at Condon’s Bronx home throughout Friday afternoon. During some or this time Condon was absent, in one instance to deliver one of his lectures. New York police kept up their efforts to trace one of the S2O bank notes, which was in the $50,000 ransom money paid by Condon to the supposed kidnapers in a fake deal on April 2. In Norfolk, the three negotiators maintained their optimism. Rear Admiral Guy H. Burrage and John Hughes Curtis, who returned from a four-day trip early Friday, reported they were continuing their efforts to restore the baby. The Rev. H. Dobson-Peacock, the other negotiator, gave new assurances of the infant’s safety. G. 0. P. SEEKS KEYNOTER Senator L. J. Dickinson Favored as Convention Committee Meets. By United Press >* CHICAGO, April 16.—Senator L. J. Dickinson of lowa appeared today the leading choice for keynoter of the Republican national convention, as the party arrangements committee conferred here on the selection.

NANCE ROMANCE; JUDGE, DAUGHTER ARE SENTENCED

the trial began. Her father sat erect. Solicitor J. C. Little read the indictment. The state prepared to call the first witness. The defense made its dramatic announcement that a plea of guilty would be entered. MUM JUDGE Harwood, 52, former assistant attorney-general and a member of a socially-prominent state family, went to the witness stand. *

Infant Mends Broken Romance* of Midget

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Mrs. Mavis Paucci and Baby

Bonus Letters The Times today prints another full page of letters from Indiana World war veterans, giving their views on immediate payment of the bonus. Turn to Page 5 to read them. Owing to space limitations, it will be imposible to print any more letters on this subject, though The Times will be glad to hear further from its readers as to their opinions on this controversy, A page of letters also was printed in Friday’s editions, so that both sides of the matter might be presented fairly, the veterans being given an opportunity to express their opinions on the articles written by Talcott Powell, now appearing in The Times. Today’s Powell article is on Page 2. In an effort to cast more light on the subject, a series of articles will start in The Times, on completion of the Powell series, written t by .Senator Elmer TBhomas of Oklahoma. Thomas is sponsor of the senate bill which advocates payment at this time to the veterans. Watch for the first of his series. Date of starting will be announced next week.

KIDNAPERS GRAB BOY FROM GRIB Baby, 2, Stolen; Delaware Girl, 9, Is Missing. By United Press SAN DIEGO, cal., April 16.—Robert Rice, 2, was kidnaped Friday night from his crib in the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Dyer. The screen of a window was cut to gain entrance The child had been cared for at the home of his grandparents following the separation of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Rice. The father was said to be a former marine officer. On information furnished by Dyer, police began a search for the father, who, Dyer told them, had been near the home recently and been warned to keep away. The parents were said to have separated in New York City in March. Silent on Abduction By United Press WILMINGTON, Del., April 16. Nine-year-old Hilda Brodsky has been threatened with bodily injury, police believe, in what they say was a ransom note mailed special delivery to her wealthy father by supposed kidnapers in Washington. Harry Brodsky, the father, jobber and hosiery manufacturer, refused police admittance to his house when they arrived to investigate the supposed kidnaping. And today he declined to confirm or deny the kidnaping story. He asked newspaper men to publish no reports and not to telephone, ‘‘So I can keey this line open.” Brodsky’s attitude indicated he proposed to bargain with the supposed kidnapers. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m.: South wind, 3 miles an hour; temperature, 52; barometric pressure, 30.13 at sea level; ceiling, overcast, estimated 7,000 feet; visibility, 8 miles; field, good.

He began his twenty-five minute story, tears streaming down his ashen face—a confesison that he had destroyed records to save his daughter. Judge Thad Bryson followed with a dramatic plea for clemency. Judge W. A. Devin ruled that his colleague must serve twelve months in the Wake county jail on a misdemeanor charge. A felony conviction would have disbarred him. The girl was sentenced to two years in state prison.

Entered ns Second-Class Matter at Postotfice, Indianapolis

NATIONAL attention was attracted a year ago when Miss Mavis Lane of Memphis. Tenn., of normal height, became the bride of Jozippie ( Baron) Paucci, circus midget, under the ‘‘big top” while the show was in Charleroi, Pa. • The romance faded, according to Mrs. Paucci, because of jealousy.

“So many women would pick him up and exclaim, he was cute,” she said. But now Mrs. Paucci, who is five feet three inches tall, is the mother of a baby girl, born in a Memphis hospital and weighing five pounds and 11 ounces, only 32 pounds less than her father.

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Paucci is 36 inches tall. ‘‘For the baby’s sake I think we will go back together,” Mrs. Paucci says. -‘‘l still love him.” Circus friends who attended the wedding are endeavoring to reunite the couple. Paucci, who was preparing in winter quarters in Florida for the circus season, was delighted with prospects of a reconciliation when told of the baby daughter. “I hope my wife will join me on the road,” he said, and indicated that he would like to add the new daughter to the ranks of curious exhibits in the circus, circus. "But that W'ill be up to my wife,” he remarked.

How the Market Opened

By United Press NEW YORK, April 16.—The stock market presented a firm tone at the opening today, being aided by President Hoover’s reassurance that bonus legislation would not pass and that liquidation had run its course. Trading was dull, but the majority of prices were above previous closing levels, some gains running to a point. Auburn Automobile, Friday’s weak feature, again was depressed to a new low, selling at 40y 2 , off 1% points from the previous close. A few other issues, including Montgomery Ward, National Power and Light, Transamerica, Anaconda and International Telephone, lost small fractions. Steel common opened unchanged at 34% and then firmed up from that level. Other steel shares were firm. Most of the utilities made small gains and American Telephone rallied slightly after its dip in the late trading Friday. Railroad issues were strong with Atchison up a point at 45%. Foreign Exchange •By James T. Hamill & Cos.) —April IS— Open. Sterling. England 3.76% Franc. France 0394% Lira, Italy 0514 Franc, Belgium 1403 Mark, Germany 2377 Guilder, Holland 4053 Peseta. Spain 0769 Krone. Norway 1903 Krone. Denmark 2060 Yen. Japan 3325 Chicago Stocks Opening (By James T. Hamill Sc Cos.) —April 16— Bendix Avia ... 7%>:insull pfd % Borg Warner .. 7% Insull 6s '4O Its Central 111 % Middle Wfcst % Cent So West .. 2 Natl Sec pld ... 30 Com Edison 72%,Swift & Cos 18% Insull com %!Walgreen Strs . B*4

THE judge and his daughter, an honor graduate of North Carolina State college for women, were taken immediately to their respective prisons and started serving their sentences. Miss Harwood embezzled $4,823 in state tax funds, records revealed, when an audit was ordered. Her father prepared a defense. He was given access to state records. It was then that he erased and blotted figures to cover up bis daughter's crime.

FIVE-DAY WORKING WEEK IS URGED BY HOOVER TO SPEED PROSPERITY RETURN General Adoption of Proposal Would Help End Unemployment and Put Business on Sound Basis, Says Executive. ECONOMY PROGRAM IS SUBMITTED Wants Principle of Shorter Hours Applied First to Federal Government as Example to Remainder of Nation. BY HENRY F. MISSELWITZ United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, April 16.—President Herbert Hoover favors general adoption of a five-day working week as a major means of increasing employment, and re-establishing American business on a firm foundation. He believes the groundwork already has been laid for business advances, which can be consolidated and extended by adoption of the five-day week. Pointing an example to the rest of the country, the President is urging establishment of a five-day week in the nation’s biggest business—the federal government. He has made this the cardinal point in his government economy and reorganization program.

SOVIET PAPER FLAILSJAPAN Charges Nippon Militarists Seek to Provoke War. By United Press MOSCOW, April 16. Soviet Russia’s alarm over the possibility of serious disturbances in Manchuria was reflected today in newspaper headlines while editorial comment accused Japanese militarists for seeking a pretext for war with the Soviets. An editorial in Pravda said “Japanese imperialists are preparing for further war activity outside Manchuria. If they need a pretext, it will not be difficult to create provocations. The imperialists’ policy follows a definite purpose—to transform occupied territory into a hotbed of further adventures.” Pravda concluded that if “the peaceful spirit of the Soviet Union is interpreted by Japanese imperialists as proof of our weakness and our inability to defend the frontier, it is so much the worse for them.” Headlines on Manchurian news throughout the nation denounced alleged anti-Soviet plots at Harbin in which White Russians were accused as serving as the tool of Japanese war makers. The report that the American Atlantic fleet might remain in the Pacific was regarded as an indication of conflict between the United States and Japan. Japanese May Withdraw By United Press TOKIO, April 16—The Japanese army is ready to abandon operations near the Manchurian-Siberian border to relieve tension between Japon and Soviet Russia, a government spokesman said today. The spokesman said no military significance should be attached to the fact that Japanese war ships escort fishing vessels to leased fishing grounds off Kamchatka. The naval ecort is provided annually, the spokesman said. ASK TOW-IN REFUND Driver Files Suit Against City Officials. A suit aiming at return of auto tow-in fees is on file in circuit court today against the city, Charles R. Myers, Donald Morris, and Frank Dailey as safety board members; William L. Elder, city controller; Chief Mike Morrissey and the Plaza garage. The suit was filed late Friday by Harry H. Trimble, 1552 West Washington street, and asks for return of a $3 impounding fee. The tow-in ordinance recently was held unconstitutional in municipal court. New York Stocks Opening (By J. T. Hamill Sc Cos.) —April 16— American Can.. 51% Lig Sc Myers (B> 51 Air Red 44%!Montft Ward ... 7% Atchison 45% N Y Central 20 Vi Anaconda 5% No American ... 27 Am For Pwr .. 4% Penn R R 13% Am Tel St Tel 106% Packard 2% Auburn 40% Radio 5% Cons Gas 53% Cons OH 5 Byers A M .... 9% Std ot Ind .... 15*4 Case J I 29 1 2 Std Oil of N J.. 24V, Cbes & Ohio ... 16' - Texas Corp 11% Fox Film (A).. 2V*!U S Steel 34% Gen Foods 34% United Corp .... 7 Gillette 18% Un Aircraft 11% Gen Motors ... 12% Un Carbide 22% Gen Elec 16% Vanadium 9% Goodyear 10% Westinghouse El 23% Int Nickel 6% Woolworth 38% Johns Manville ll%i

Harwood was indicted and he was suspended at his own request pending trial. It is believed that he will resign his post as judge a£ once. nun ALMOST $2,900 was found on deposit to the credit of Miss Harwood. It was attached. And it is believed the state will recover all the money taken. Money taken in the hope that profits from stocks bought would finance the girl’s marriage, according to fellow employe*,

Capital EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marlon County, 3 Cent*

It would provide federal jobs for perhaps 35,000 additional persons, and at the same time reduce the total pay roll about $90,000,000. Mr. Hoover fees that concerns now operating full time would do well to follow this example. As business picks up for those now running on shorter schedules, he believes the five-day weeks should be persistently applied until all unemployment is abserved. Sees Business Advances As to the prospects for business recovery, the President holds that pessimism of recent weeks has been greatly exaggerated. He believes the time has come when definite advances can be made if resolute courage and confidence are maintained. The most important specific factor in this belief is tys conviction that the banking crisis degnitely is over. Mr Hoover is convinced also that the $2,000,000 veterans’ bonus will be killed. He believes the new tax bill will be passed soon and will not seriously affect business Balancing of the federal budget is assured These are favorable indications which the President believes have been overlooked Straight Five-Day Week Application of the five-day week principle to the government service was the leading point in anew “omnibus” economy bill which Budget Director Roop, in behalf of the White House, submitted to the special house economy committee Friday night. The plan calls for a straight fiveday week for those who work by the day. Saturday already is a half holiday, so they would lose fifty-two half days or twenty-six full days a year. All who work by the year and are paid more than $1,200 would be compelled to take four weeks vacation without pay. The President estimates this plan not only would effect a saving of $90,000,000 a year, but would enable the government to take on between 30,000 and 35,000 additional employees. The economy committee’s proposed flat reduction in salaries would create no new jobs. The house committee met today to go over the President’s economy plan. It expects to lay before the house early next week a complete bill providing savings totaling at least $200,000,000 —the amount needed to the $1,000,000,000 to be raised in new* taxes to balance the budget. Program Is Submitted The $200,000,000 governmen economy bill, as laid before the house economy committee, includes these items: 1. Compulsory thirty-day, payless vacation for all employees receiving more than $1,200 a year; a five-day week for all per diem workers. 2. Give the President authority to reorganize the federal departments and commissions. 3. Charge for test work done for private industry by the bureau of standards and bureau of mines. 4. Establish a naval board to recommend abolition of various shore stations. 5. Transfer cost of maintenance of Philippine Scouts to the Philippine government. 6. Reduce the government’s printing bill. 7. Eliminate federal vocational educational appropriations. 8. Postpone construction of new heating plant for government buildings in Washington. 9. Abolish army and navy transport service. 10. Increase patent fees. RETURN CRASH SUSPECT Autoist Accused in Collision Which Caused Four Deaths. By United Press ANDERSON, Ind., April 16. Guyon Hartzell, 33, was back in Anderson today to answer to a charge of manslaughter, as the result of an auto accident last August in which four persons were killed. Hartzell waived extradition and was brought from Des Moines. He is charged with having driven a machine which struck the one driven by Noble Johnson, and drove it into the path of a railroad train.