Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1932 — Page 15

Second Section

Record of Senator James E. Watson on Labor Measures

Watson's At- | Dale Measure titude Toward I^bor 5- 9-08 District of Columbia child labor bill Favorable 2- 5-17 Immigration restriction bill Favorable 9-25-17 Appropriation for employment bureau Unfavorable 12-18-18 Tax on products of child labor Favorable 10- Anti-trust clause in first deficiency bill Not voting 11- 5-19 Labor charter in League of Nations pact Unfavorable 1- Americanization bill, education of illiter- Paired a,CR Unfavorable 2- Esch-Cummins railroad bill conference re- Paired port containing anti-labor provisions Unfavorable 4- 1-20 Motion to increase appropriation lor labor department's bureau of conciliation Not voting

STORK’S PRICE DROPS; BABIES AT CUT PRICES Birth Bill Is Slashed 25 Per Cent in Foot Years, Survey Shows. Papa Stork has trimmed his bill 25 ppr cent within the last four years. The depression bird, the mythical bearer of babies, and not the zoo species, has been forced to cut the high cost of rattle-users in the same proportion that the maker of rattles has had to do. Mary Hoosier born in 1928 cost just 25 per cent more than Johnny Hoosier of 1932. And the decrease in the cost of beginning life had to slump with the stock ticker and wages, if city hospitals and doctors hoped to have patients to treat. One hospital, in fact, faced with the increasing number of maternity cases being cared for in homes, resorted to the bargain baby rate. Prospective fathers were given the choice of three rates, S4O, $45, arid $55, for hospital service for ten days. Hospital Rates Slashed The S4O rate is for a bed in a four-bed ward, the $45 in a two-bed ward and the $55 rate in a private room. The fees include care of the baby, laboratory and delivery room expenses Four years ago, in the same hospital, the cheapest day rate for the ward beds were $3.50 to $4, and the patient, after paying for the bed. was compelled to pay the additional $2 fee for laboratory and $lO for the delivery room. Under the bargain rate children are born to the tune of a hospital cast of S4O, instead of approx- j imately $52. The Indiana State Medical Asso- I riation declares that obstretricians.j experts in the care of maternity j cases, have reduced their fees 25 per cent. Doctors’ Fees Arc Less The stork’s Man Friday, who gave anew infant a lusty pat for a SSO fee in 1928, is doing the same job! in 1932 for $35 and,in some cases below that amount. The saying, "the rich always pay," is a fair barometer of prices in the baby mart. The silver-spooned babies cost as high ns a $1,500 fee. where complications set in, for the wealthy parents. The scale is balanced, however, in that the charity work of the individual physicians, the bills he never collects is evened by higher fees to those who can afford to pay. “Collections. they're terrible.” avers one physician,’ ’and even with our prices cut.” Collections Are Bad Where two weeks formerly was considered the average time limit in maternity*cases in hospitals, now doctors are permitting patients to return to homes within ten days. And it is because of this ten-day-time limit that the bargain babyprice was fixed in one uospital. While all hospitals of the city and physicians report decrease in costs to patients, the nursing profession has kept to its old pre-depression rate of $7 a day for awaiting the stork, whether in a hospital or a home. The regular nursing rate is $6 a day in a hospital and $7 in the “home for the majority of illnesses. Nurses Cut Salaries Numerous reports of nurses working below the state association’s fixed charge have been received. Nurses have suffered from lack of employment due to prospective parents depending on the hospital's staff for attendance at the bedside. Charity wards in'the city hospital, with their beds continually in use, are mute testimonials to unemployment and inability of former workers to pay for hospital care, let alone physicians and nurses. But, undaunted. Papa Stork keeps on presenting his bills, depression or no depression, paid or unpaid, and you always can bank on him for one of two things—a boy or a girl. RED CROSS DISCUSSES POOR RELIEF PROJECTS Indiana Conference Ends Two-Day Parley at Noon Today. The American Red Cross, in the last year, has spent $3,738,000 aiding victims in ninety-five disasters, in addition to providing unemployment relief, in some form, to about 2.000,000 persons. These facts were brought out at the Red Cross Indiana conference two-day session, which was ended at noon today, by De Witt C. Smith, eastern area manager. Smith, who spoke at a dinner Tuesday night in the Columbia Club ballroom, also pointed to other relief projects, including collection of clothing and food for needy, furnishing of garden seed, and cash loans for relief in stricken areas. Health Club to Hold Dance First of a series of dances to be given by the Health Nature Study Clubs of Indianapolis will be held at 8 Friday night at the Community house in Brookside park.

Full bused Wire Service of the Lotted (’rets Association

Herewith is the American Federation of Labor's record of Sev/itor James E. Watson's votes on legislative matters of interest to labor:

AL’S JUST A SLAVE

Jolson Finds He Has No Rights

*' V.- f jjv VrnS<SK ms SATISN. _ FIFO, / D DONE THE WOULD 8E V SHOW NINE X 3s\UPAT - TIMES* -• c-d 19 idJep j’ J. LBEtrFPX. I want TO WAS \ \ \ ■■ %'■ • f J "who's important)* A1 Jolson

This is (ho second of a series of si x movie columns written h.v movie stars for NEA Service and The Times, while Dan Thomas, staff correspondent in Hollywood, Is on vacation. BY AiTjOLSOV I BELIEVE I read something in history to the effect that Caesar had a slave ride with him in his chariot to keep him humble. In Hollywood, when you're making pictures, and you ever get to feeling important, they have directors, assistant directors, camera men. sound experts, electricians and plenty of others to take the importance out of you. Oh, boy, how they can roust you about if they want to!

, Do I hear someone asking, “Why, aren't you the star, and do what you like?” Ha, ha. Sure, you’re the star—ana what? Remember the old story about the fellow that joined the army, dreaming of strutting in dashing uniform, and his first job was valeting a. bunch of mules. His pal, who had joined up with him. found him at his desk. “Why,’ says the friend, “even if ybif are in the army, they can’t make you do that!” Well—- •••*'# u n THE other night I just had finished a scene—or thought I had finished a scene—in my Unifeed Artists’ picture, “The New Yorker.” The action called for me to jump in a lake and rescue Madge Evans. It was 3 o’clock in the morning, and plenty chilly, even if it was balmy California. I had done a Johnny Weissmuller, carried Madge to safety in approved hero fashion, and hurried my gypping self to a friendly log fire *dry out. I thought it had been great, and was congratulating myself and t hinking of hot coffee and a warm bed, when an assistant director came running. “Hurry, Al," he ordered. “Get into another suit. We re going to shoot it again right away.” A friend of mine, not connected with pictures, who had come with me on location, was puzzled.

FAMILIAR STAR GROUP IS GUIDE TO STUDY OF HEAVENS THIS MONTH

BY JAMES STOKLEY Astronomical Writer, Science Service (Copyright. 1932. by Science Sen-ice, Inc. 'T'O the southern evening sky -*• in October there comes what is without doubt one of the most familiar of star groups—a figure that makes an excellent guide from which to start a study of the autumn constellations. This is the so-called “Great Square in Pegasus,” which, J>y the way, is a rather inappropriate name. Only three-quarters of, the square, that is, three of the four stars that mark its corners, are in Pegasus, the winged horse. The fourth star is in the adjoining constellation of Andromeda. About 9 o'clock tonight, look high in the south, and there you will see this figure, as indicated on the map. The four stars, of so nearly similar brightness, and forming so good a square, make it easy to identify, even though none of the stars of the first magnitude. The most brilliant is Alpheratz, the one in the northeast corner, which is the one in Andromeda. Its magnitude, as determined by accurate astronomical measurements. is 2.15. Markab. diagonally opposite, is the next brightest, with 2.57. Only slightly inferior, hardly enough to be detected with the unaided eye, is the star directly above it, SCheat, whose magnitude is 2.61. Algenib, below Alpheratz. is the faintest of the quartet, for 2.87 is its rating. The other naked eye stars in Pegasus are fainter than these, to the. west of the square. One set extends westward from Scheat; these form the forelegs

The Indianapolis Times

Watson’s AtDate Measure titude Toward Labor 4- 3-20 Retirement bill, amendment prohibiting affiliation of federal employes with organized labor Favorable 11- 3-21 Senator Smoot's sales tax amendment to HR3245 Unfavorable 11- 4-21 Second vote on sales tax amendment Unfavorable 4- Immigration restriction bill Favorable 5- Postal employes wage increase bill Favorable 6- 2-24 Child labor amendment to Constitution.... Favorable 1- 6-25 Passage of postal wage increase’ bill over President's veto Unfavorable 5-11-26 Bill abolishing railroad labor board and providing collective bargaining Favorable

“Why,” he whyed, “you’re soaked to the skin. They can’t make you do that.” “I know they can’t,” I told him, “But here I go for another ducking.” # * tt AND before w ; e got through that scene, and the director and the photographers and the sound recorders and electi’icians and everybody else were satisfied, Madge and I had done the wouldbe suicide and rescue nine times. The sun was just peeping over the hills when the director, Chester Erskin, who incidentally is only 28, finally said, “okay,” and we could start back to Los Angeles. “Don’t forget we have a 10 o'clock call at the studio,” said the director. “Al will have to be on the set at 9.” reminded a sound man. “That big orchestra has been called for 9 for a rehearsal of one of Al's numbers and we can’t keep them waiting.” “Make it 8:30 if you can, Al,' piped a wardrobe man ’We've got to fit you for that new outfit in the next sequence.” “Get going,” I yelled to my driver. “If we don’t get away from here someone will want me at 7 and I won’t even have a chance to grab an hour’s sleep.” Who’s important?

Next—Bebe Daniels gives the “low-down" on Hollywood at play!

OCTOBER. 'CtUAT / * r piscES SAGITTA / / r* . Altai \ / • Si L Fomalhaut % m PHOENIX _ GRUS SAGITTARIUS; "WEST?

* * ° • SYMBOLS FOR STARS IN ORDER OF BRIGHTNESS

of the mythical flying horse. The others extend from Markab, and, according to the ancient fancies, outline the animal's neck and head. Thus, as Pegasus appears in the sky for us in the northern hemisphere, he is upside down. n n m A NDROMEDA, and the neighboring constellations, as well as Pegasus, are all connected in mythology. The winged horse sprang into being from the blood of the Medusa, when her head was struck off by Perseus. While this was happening, Cassiopeia, queen of Ethiopia, of which Cepheus was king, had boasted that she was more beautiful than the sea nymphs. This so annoyed Neptune that he sent a sea monster to ravage the coast of Ethiopia. When the oracle of Ammon was appealed to, she announced that the princess, Andromeda, would have to be chained

INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5, 1932

WOMEN UNITE TO FIGHT FOR RIGHT TO TOIL National Association Given Start Here: Will Battle Police Ousters. Indianapolis’ policewomen today have a powerful ally in their battle against dismissal from the police force on minor technical charges. This ally is the new National Association of Working Women, being formed here to stop discrimination against working women, because of their sex or marital status. “We are going to defend all these policewomen against unfair dismissal on charges which would not be preferred against men,” declared Mrs. Florence K. Thacker, a practicing attorney and an incorporator of the Indiana association. Organized in Nine States Mrs. Thacker was attorney for Mrs. Margaret Osborn, policewoman, who last week won a suspension in place of dismissal, given policewomen in the past by the safety board. “We are not trying to force any one to retain incompetent employes,” she said, “but if police officials want to get rid of these women, let them do it fairly.” The N. A, W. W. is being organized in nine states, and work will be started in other states soon, Mrs. Thatcher explained. National headquarters may be established here, inasmuch as an Indianapolis woman, Mrs. Ida Broo, certified public accountant, is acting as national secretary. Permanent officers have not been named. Asks for Fairness “Years ago our grandmothers stayed at home and worked,” said Mrs. Thacker. “They were kept busy with baking, washing and other household drudgery. “Man-made machinery has taken away these jobs, and now women are going out into the business world to work. And why shouldn’t they have the right to work? Os the million married women employed in the country now, 95 per cent are working because of economic necessity and are helping to support families. “There is complaint that women take jobs from men and that working women should retire now in favor of men, because of the depression. “Why wouldn't it be just as fair j to ask men who are well fixed finan- : daily to quit their jobs, or to ask men making $5,000 a year to divide | their jobs and salaries with one or more other men. as to ask a $1,200 a year woman to give up her job i entirely?” Membership Is Limited The association’s membership is j limited to working women of maj ture age, who at some time have been employed gainfully. It is not i concerned with the younger girl who lis working as a stop gap between ; school and marriage. Mrs. Mary Kynett, 1021 Central avenue, president of the May Wright Council for Women, has charge of organizing chapters of the association here and in nearby 1 cities.

to*a rock on the coast, and sacrificed to the monster, who then would spare the country. These instructions were followed, but before she wqs devoured, Perseus arrived, not mounted on Fegasus, though some apochryphal versions of the legend have it so, and slew the monster. Then he married Andromeda, even though she previously had been betrothed to Phineus. This led to a battle royal at the wedding, in which the unsuccessful suitor and all his cohorts were slain. Later, Pegasus became the steed of another hero, Bellerophon. The position of Pegasus and Andromeda in the sky already have been mentioned, and are shown on the maps. Immediately north of Andromeda is a constellation in the shape of a W. This is Cassiopeia, the queen, represented as seated on her throne. Above and to the west of her is a constellation of somewhat fainter stars, farming a smaller

Warson's AtDate Measure titude Toward Labor v 5-24-28 Passage of bill providing higher pay for night Paired work in postal service over President’s veto Fsvorable 12-19-28 Bill to protect free labor from competition with convict made goods Favorable 5- 7-30 CONFIRMATION OF JUDGE PARKER Unfavorable 12-20-30 Conference report denying wage increases to federal employes Unfavorable .3- 1-32 Norris-La Guardia anti-injunction bill Favorable 3- 3-32 Prohibiting convict labor on government roads Favorable 4- Motion to recommit treasury-postoffice bill w r ith instruction to reduce amount 10 per cent Favoraole 5- Sales tax amendment to revenue bill Unfavorable

SHIP’S BEER KICKS

Real Brew Made on U. S. Liner

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WILLEBRANDT WILL AID G. 0. P. CAUSE 1928 Crusader Will Speak in California. By Scripps-Haward Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Oct. s.—Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt is heeding a call to come to the aid of her party. She is leaving Washington this week for a motor trip to California, planning to‘arrive in time to participate in the last two weeks of the campaign in Los Angeles county, her home, and elsewhere throughout the state. Mrs. Willebrandt will not speak in any other state, she says. It had been her intention, she indicated earlier in the campaign, to keep hands off entirely, because of her opposition to the prohibition planks in both platforms. She indicated that she might support the candidacy of Tallant Tubbs, dripping wet Republican candidate for the senate, because he is the G. O. P. nominee. County Teachers to Meet First Marion county teacher professional meeting of the school year will be held Saturday in the high school at Lawrence. Presiding over the meeting will be Fred T. Gladden, county superintendent.

square, with a triangle attached to its northeastern side. This is Cepheus, the king. Below Cassiopeia, and to the left of the lower part of Andromeda, is Perseus. The sea monster is low in the southwest, represented by the constellation of Cetus. BUM npHOUGH some of these constellations are fairly conspicuous, none of them contains first magnitude stars. There are, however, six stars of this brilliance in the October evening sky. Most brilliant of all is Vega, in Lyra, the heavenly lyre, high in the west. Directly above Lyra is Cygnus the swan, sometimes called the northern cross, from its characteristic shape. At the top of the cross is Deneb. To the southwest of Sygnus is Aquila, the eagle, containing the brilliant Altair. Fomalhaut is another of the first magnitude stars now visible, and is low in the south, the only star that easily can be seen, from these latitudes, of Piscis Austrinus, the southern fish. In the northeast, just below Perseus, is Auriga, the charioteer, with Capella. Adjoining it, to the right, is Taurus, the bull, with the bright and redish Aldebaran marking the imaginary animal's eye. And now let us return to Cepheus. which this month is in the best position of the year for observation in the evening sky. Though this constellation contains no very bright stars, it does boast of one among the most important bodies in the heavens—the first star to be discovered of

—By World-Telegram Staff Photographer. Karl Kausler with his beermaking machinery on the Manhattan. BY JOSEPH MITCHELL Tin es Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct, s.—There is an admirable but undersized brewery aboard the liner Manhattan of the United States Lines. It is set up in a plain, cold little room on E deck, near the crew's quarters, and the smell of a keg yeast and hop cones is faint. There are only four jumbo kegs in the brewery room and the other apparatus would make a beer critic melancholy, but Karl Kausler, the Manhattan’s braumeister, who was born in Bavaria and educated in Beck’s right bank brewery in Bremen, has no fault to find with it. “Fifteen barrels at once I make each day already,” said Braumeister Kausler today. “The yeast goes in. Fifty hours go by slowly in the tank. Then we got beer to drink already. Only the yeast I put in. Then comes beer.” 808 TO aid the digestion and the humor of its passengers the Manhattan, which is under the American flag, takes on a supply of beer extract in Hamburg. (The extract is put up in Kausler’s alma mater, Beck’s in Bremen.) When the liner leaves port, the brapmeister pours the extract in his tank, adds yeast, and in fortyeight to fifty hours the beer is on draught. It is honorable Bremen beer, 12 per cent alcohol, loose and wet. Braumeister Kausler, who has a puny, Hitlerian mustache, said that it helps people solve their problems, and that only four glasses will make an American frivolous already. B B B THE brewery is about the size of a west side furnished room, desirable. It contains the four jumbo kegs, a central keg, a tiny filter, a red tank and a cage with a canary, the braumeister’s pet, inside. There are rubber tubes leading from the various containers, but the braumeister's English is new and he said there was no need to explain about the tubes. He does not make beer while in American ports' All his materials are locked up by the customs officers, and so the '•braumeister just stays in his quarters and sleeps, reads German newspapers, eats heavy black bread and sausages and listens to his canary.

LACERTA x J^rr*\^. ™ Twcygnus . Y- / sffli r" r \A wawuuliiK if/ f UMMP "S‘ US \ L f LORONA ft I Jace Jfortk

a type which enables astronomers to plumb the greatest depths of the universe. This star is the uppermost one in the little square, and is of the fourth magnitude, easily visible to the unaided eye, though not conspicuous. It is not bright enough to have a proper name, and usually is designated as delta Cephei. For this reason, stars like it are called Cepheids. B B * ■pvELTA CEPHEI is a variable star. This is not so remarkable, for many stars change periodically in brightness. Some, like Algol, a famous variable in the constellation of Perseus, consist of two bodies, a bright and a dark one, which revolve around each other. At regular intervals the dark star eclipses the bright'* one. But delta Cephei is a variable of another kind. It brightens rapidly, then diminishes more slowly. It takes 5 days, 8 hours, 48 minutes and 39 seconds for it

Second Section

Eter*>d a Second Class Matter at roatoffire. lndianspoli

LABOR RATES JIM WATSON AS FOE, CITING VOTES ON MANY IMPORTANT ISSUES Support of Judge Parker Held Among Worst of Senator's Actions by Federation Chiefs. HELPFUL OX MINOR BILLS ONLY G. O. P. Leader Always Found With Enemies of Workers at Time of Crisis, They Declare. BY WALKER STONE , Time* Start CorrfMH>ndenl WASHINGTON, Oct. 5. —The difficulty of serving two masters at the same time has plagued Senator James E. Watson throughout his long career in congress—ten years in the house of representatives and sixteen years in the senate. One master has been th£ Republican party, in whose temple he worshiped the Great God Regularity. The other master has been Votes, and organized minorities are the deities before whom he made obeisance.

An analysis of Senator Jim’s record on labor legislation is particularly revealing of the trouble he has had in trying to work both sides of the street. In fact, labor leaders are saying that Senator Jim has not done a very good job of working their side of the street. His performance, as they see it, for the most part—has consisted of sticking rather closely to the other side of the street, beneath the beneficent shade of Republican party regularity, under the benign smile of organized wealth. Occasionally Aids Labor These labor leaders admit that Senator Jim has not been entirely neglectful. They eagerly credit him with frequently smiling and waving across the street, and occasionally doing a jaywalk out into the sunlight and over to their side. But the complaint which organized labor has against Senator Jim is that on those occasions when they have needed him most, when there was real and important work to be done on their side, his practice has been to remain safely in the shade on the other side and merely smile across. There was, for example, that memorable life and death struggle which organized labor waged two years ago against confirmation by the senate of Judge John J. Parker’s appointment to the United States supreme court. On Wrong Side Where was Senator Jim when that battle raged? Was he fighting shoulder to shoulder with labor leaders to block the attempt to place on the highest court of the land this North Carolina jurist, who had upheld sanctity of the “yellow dog” contract? Not by a long shot. He was on the other side of the street, giving aid, comfort, and active support to labor's enemies. Much to his own discomfort, Senator Jim found himself the leader of the forces that embraced Parker, “yellow-dogl’ contract, and all. But even in the thick of the battle. Senator Jim made gestures of friendliness toward the other side. Labor Doesn’t Forgive “I have to be for Parker and against you,” he confided to labor leaders. “He's the choice of President Hoover, and I'm the Republican leader in the senate. I have to go down the line for the party. I talkea with the President and tried to get him to withdrawn Parker's nomination, but he wouldn't do it." Labor has not forgiven Senator Jim for his Parker vote. On smaller matters he had been excused for his “my-party-right-or-wrong” attitude, but in the Parker issue there was a principle which could not be compromised. The labor movement would have

to make a complete change, and return to its starting point. Furthermore, the spectroscope, which shows how a star is moving, reveals that when it is increasing in brightness, the star is approaching us; when diminishing, it seems to be receding. The planets are not as numerous in the evening sky this month as they have been recently, for only one is visible. This is Saturn, famous for its syLtem of rings, which can be seen in the constellation of Capricornus, low in the southwest. On Oct. 22 it is in quadrature with the sun, which means that it is directly south as the sun is setting. The planet sets, therefore, at midnight. Three other planets, Venus, Mars and Jupiter, may be seen in the morning sky, before sunrise. During October the moon will be at first quarter on the sixth, full on the 14th, at last quarter on the 22d, and new on the 29th. Thus, from about the 4th to the 16th, the evenings will be moonlit.

ORDER COUNTY POOR AID QUIZ Committee Is Appointed by North Side Civic Clubs. Investigation of poor relief op- ; erations in Marion county was renewed today following appointment ,of a committee of the North Side Federation of Clubs Tuesday night. The committee, composed of Mrs. B. B. McDonald, Gustav Schmidt and George Q. Bruce, was named after the federation received complaints that township trustee's poor relief baskets w:re insufficient for needs of recipients, and that an excessive price is charged. The committee will co-operate with Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan's relief committee. The federation voted to join the Indianapolis Real Estate Board and other organizations in attempt to ! relieve real estate tax burden by i enforcing the $1.50 maximum levy I law, following a talk by Lawrence IG. Holmes, realty board executive | secretary. Holmes said the board will seek j legislation next January providing | funds from other forms of taxation I to make up the deficit caused by the I levy reduction. Shortening of the school year and elimination of * supervisors, as a means of reducing the school city budget, was advocated by William Bosson. suffered a body blow had this antagonistic judge been elevated to | the high court. Twenty-five times since Jim WatI son came to Washington, according !to the American Federation of Labor score chart, there have been votes in congress on matters where ; labor's interests were at stake. The A. F. of L. record reveals that I on those twenty-five votes, Watson 1 cast his lot on the side of labor j twelve times, was paired favorable i to labor on one roll call, voted unfavorable to labor eight times, was paired unfavorable to labor two times, and failed to vote twice. Gels II Black Marks The other leading labor score card, kept by the Railway Brotherhoods, shows 22 important roll calls in which he was eligible to participate, and gives Watson black marks for 11 votes against the interests of labor, white marks for 9 votes favorable to labor, and zeroes for 2 failures to vote. But Watson's labor batting average is not rated as high as the above count of favorable and unfavorable votes indicates. A careful study shows that most of his votes favorable to labor, according to labor leaders, were either on questions where the opposition to labor's viewpoint was so negligible that his vote was not needed, or matters of minor importance. Voted for Sales Tax On the big vital questions, milestones in the labor movement, leaders say Watson nearly always was found in the opposing camp, raising aloft as an alibi the banner of party regularity. The most important vote taken since the Parker confirmation vote, according to the A. F. of L. yardstick, was on the sales tax, fought bitterly by that organization as an instrument through which organized wealth sought to unload tax burdens on the poor. Watson voted for the sales tax. FINE’S NONPAYMENT IS PROBED BY JUDGE Woman Asked to Explain Passing Up SIOO Due Two Years Ago. Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer today ordered a probe into nonpayment of a SIOO fine, due two years ago, in the conviction of Mrs. Blanche Borden, 964 North Oxford street, on blind tiger charges. Ordered into court Tuesday, Mrs. Borden told Judge Sheaffer she served thirty days in jail on the charge, and thought the fine had ben paid. She asserted her fine was “stayed 1 * bv a man who made arrangements with her father, John W. Carr, 925 Ashland avenue, to take payments out of Carr’s salary each week. Mrs. Borden said that after a time she was told by this man the fine had been paid in full. Court records show SBO unpaid. Thief Gets Bonus Certificate A bonus certificate calling for $1,585 and $65 in cash was the loot of a pickpocket who robbed Charles Ballinger, Martinsville, while he was at an auction sale cm East Washington street.