Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 159, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1932 Edition 02 — Page 1
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—This Is Your Column— You Say It Be Your Own Columnist; Page One Is Wide Open for Your Views.
Editor Timet — DO those who object to married women working ever stop to consider that the extra money they earn, helps employ someone to do things they do not have time to do? Personally. I send my laundry out—except for a few items —and that helps the laundry business; I have a cleaning woman once a week and she needs the money. Recently she told me mine was the only regular” place she has left and she ha> an invalid husband. When a woman is in business It requires more clothes —and haven’t we been told to buy and buy and help business activity in other lines of work? Incidentally, clothes have to be dry cleaned, and ask any woman working in a n office how many trips her dresses make to the cleaners. I also patronize the neighborhood bake shop where the little woman is trying to make an honest living in the line for which she is fitted. It is not “charity” either, for she is a good cook and her wares are worth the price asked. These are just a few of the items in an ever widening circle. We also help clothe some nieces and nephews. My husband and I are buying our home, on bur combined salaries. A little investigation on the part of people who continually prate about the “married woman should be in the home” would show that there is good and sufficient reason for her outside employment. ONE OF THEM. tt tt Editor Timrt — I WOULD like to know if some people are entitled to receive relief baskets and still drive autos every day. I guess that the investigator was told that the car didn't belong to the beneficiary, but if the truth were looked into and the title looked up, they would see who owns it. I believe in helping the poor, but not in this case. Many poor people with children need help and are not able to get it, when the case I have in mind and others like this receive favors. ANOTHER TIMES READER. a a a Editor Timet — ELECTION is over.and the people are becoming acclimatized to the results. Hard feelings and bitterness must leave their minds if we are to accomplish anything in the future. N Such articles as appeared in the Nov. 10 edition of your paper under the “You Say It” column comes only from a poisoned mind and must go. Quoting from this article, “when President Hoover returns to England, resumes his citizenship and is knighted for his loyal job of wrecking the United States.” It is such people as the writer of the above quoted article who are responsible in a large measure for the slowing up of the progress of this nation. May I take this opportunity to congratulate The Times on the cartoon which appeared on the editorial page of that paper on this same date, depicting the average man kicking “Bitterness and Hatred” out the door with the passing of the campaign. This is the constructive view to assume on this occasion. Let us all forget party affiliations and all lend a hand to recovery. A READER. n tt tt Editor Timet — NOW that the election is over and the mud has begun to dry up, let's settle down to the task of taking a little better cfTre of the unfortunate families of our no mean city. It has been common talk that there has been graft in the system row in vogue of supplying groceries to the poor. It seems to me that the sensible thing for the county to do is to start a commissary of its own. and take the contracts away from the privately owned grocery stores. I am sure there is room in some county, state or city building that could be used for storage. Every one knows that you can buy cheaper in large quantities, so let's cut the graft and the middleman and give our poor families decent food, and enough of it to keep them from hunger. ALWAYS A TIMES BOOSTER. a tt tt Editor Timrt — I WOULD like to write a few lines in regard to the women who work at the polls on election. It seems to me that they lose their dignity when they get out to try to bring in voters. You hear a knock at your door and answer it. and a woman asks you: “Are you a Democrat or a Republican?” and says, “If you are a Democrat, we don’t want you to vote, but if you are a Republican. we do want you to vote,” or vice versa. Do you not think that to meet the housewife and say, “Have you voted yet?" and be courteous enough to say, “Someone will call for you if you'll come," regardless of the politics, it would be better? It is too late to mend matters now, but probably might help at another time. A FRIEND OF THE TIMES. SSOO IS LOSS IN FIRE Burnet-Binfcrd Lumber Company Ignited by Overheated Motor. Loss of SSOO was caused by fire Friday night at the Burnet-Binford Lumber Company, Thirtieth and Harding streets, when a section of the plant was ignited by an overheated motor. Firemen worked almost two hours to prevent spread of the blaze,. v
The Indianapolis Times Generally fair tonight and Sunday; continued cold; lowest temperature tonight about 26.
VOLUME 44—NUMBER 159
ACTUAL REPEAL IS POSSIBLE WITHIN NEXT SIX MONTHS, SAYS A. MITCHELL PALMER Wilson’s Attorney-General Holds Congress Can Ignore Legislatures in Prescribing Legal Machinery for Action. READY TO HELP IN NEXT BUDGET Estimates Quick Move Would Make Available $2,000,000,000 Annual Revenue to Lighten Burden of Taxes. BY LEO R. SACK Time* Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—Complete repeal of the eighteenth amendment can be accomplished in time to make $2,000,000,000 of federal revenue available for the fiscal year beginning July 1, in the opinion of former Attorney-General A. Mitchell Palmer, Ilis constitutional studies convince him, he says, that the two or three-year delay anticipated by many students of the problem between the time congress passes a federal resolution, and it is ratified by conventions in thirty-six states, can be avoided and actual repeal accomplished within the next six months.
FARMER, WIFE SLAINjN HOME Shotgun Used to Shoot Down Elderly Pair. By United Press HARTFORD CITY, Ind., Nov. 12. —The double murder of an elderly farmer and his wife was disclosed today when their bodies were found in their farm house, nine miles northeast of here. The victims were A. C. Moore, 60, and his wife Violet, 55. The crime was discovered this morning by Perry Macon, who had called to collect Moore’s milk for the creamery. Only one can instead of the customary two was sitting outside. Macon went into the house to ask where the other can was.. On the kitchen floor he found Moore face downward in a pool of blood. Macon stepped into the living room and there found the wife. She was lying on her back. Both had been murdered with a shotgun. No trace of the weapon could be found, disproving any possible theory that it could have been murder and suicide. Sheriff Ira Mannix and Coroner W. W. Ayres were called by Macon. They said that robbery apparently was the motive, since neighbors could give no other reason why the aged couple could have been killed. $10(T000 ELEVATOR~ SWEPT BY FLAMES Grain Plant With Capacity of 1,000,000 Bushels Destroyed. By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Nov. 12. A spectacular fire Friday night destroyed the SIOO,OOO grain elevator of the Terre Haute Terminal Grain Company and spread to 100 box cars on a nearby siding. Several of the cars were demolished. The elevator, which has a capacity of one million bushels, was empty. Most of the freight cars were filled with rail equipment. Student Dies in Glider Crash By United Press SEATTLE, Nov. 12. Charles Durr, 20, University of Washington student, was killed instantly south of Boeing field Friday when the wing of his power glider, collapsed and plunged the fragile craft 500 feet to the ground. He had built the glider in his spare moments.
Order Your Coal Today Cold weather is here to stay. The surest insurance against the cold blast of winter is a bin full of good coal. Now is the time to purchase yonr coal for the winter. On the want ad page today and every day you will find the listings of the reliable coal merchants of Indianapolis. Coal prices are the lowest now that they have been in years. Let The Times Coal classification he your guide in selecting your coal dealer. See Classification 39 on the Want Ad Page
AGED POOR FARM INMATE HIT-RUN DEATH VICTIM
Victim of a hit and run driver, Tobias Becker, 86-year-old inmate of the Marion county infirmary, is dead today. His broken body was identified after being found Friday afternoon in bushes one-half mile west of the intersection of Forty-second street and Kessler boulevard. He had been missing from the infirmary since Tuesday. Relatives said he was placed in the institution due to his habit of taking long, wandering walks. That the man was struck by an automobile and his body taken to the place .where it was found, is a
INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, NOV. 12, 1932
“Repeal will be hastened and the nation’s depleted treasury replenished if congress at the short session is responsive to the unquestioned mandate of the people,” Palmer said today. “If the short session disregards the wishes of the voters, the same result can be accomplished by an extra session convening in March, which is unqualifiedly pledged to repeal.” It is the opinion of Woodrow Wilson’s attorney-general that congress has authority under the Constitution to ignore state legislatures entirely in prescribing the legal machinery whereby the eighteenth amendment can be repealed. Constitution Is Quoted Other authorities have held that it is necessary for congress to act through legislatures which in turn will fix dates for state conventions. “Article * V of the Constitution,” Palmer said, “provides that the congress may direct that the proposed amendment shall be submitted for ratification, either by the legislatures of the states or by conventions of the state called for that purpose. “The Constitution is silent, however, on how these conventions shall be called, how they shall be constituted, how many members they shall contain, when they shall meet and when they shall act. ‘‘The supreme court has held that congress has the power, ‘keeping within reasonable limits,’ to prescribe the ‘details’ involved in carrying out the general power granted to the congress of directing how a proposed enactment be submitted for ratification by the several states.” Says Congress Has Power Because the Constitution is silent upon details, Palmer argues, and he has prepared a brief to sustain his opinion, that “the congress must possess the implied powers to provide the machinery for carrying out the powers expressly granted to it by the Constitution.” Mitchell contends that the constitutional convention of 1787 intended to make ratification of constitutional amendments a matter wholly under the direction of the congress, and not subject to the whims of state legislatures. “Because of this,’’ he continues, “I am satisfied that congress in passing a resolution repealing the eighteenth amendment, may direct that it be submitted to conventions of the states, may provide when the conventions shall meet and conclude their business,, how many may attend and all other details so that the effort to rtpeal the prohibition law may not be made a political football for years to come. Calls for Prompt Action “Since the present emergency calls for prompt action the congress should act without delay and the time limit proposed for ratification should be made fairly short in order that repeal can be accomplished before the new fiscal year begins.” Mitchell estimates, on the bases of previous whisky, wine and beer revenues, that a tax of $1,163,432,000, would be available for the federal government, which when added to the costs of prohibition enforcement would mean a net savings of $2,000,000,000 annually in federal revenues. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 24 10 a. m 27 7a. m 25 11 a. m 27 Ba. m 25 12 (noon).. 27 9 a. m 25 1 p. m 28
-theory held by Dr. John A. Salb, deputy coroner, and deputy sheriffs. After reading newspaper accounts of discovery of the body. Miss Anna Albright, 2702 West Washington street, a granddaughter, identified the body at city morgue. Four Negroes found the body while hunting rabbits. The Negroes were John Jumper, 914 West Vermont street; Walter Bennett, 733 Drake street; William Roberts, 812 Drake street, and Harrison Shelton, 925 Vs North West street. The man incurred a fractured skull and his left/eg, right hip and ,hand .were broi
NBC Tieup Is Seen in WKBF Deal
BY JOHN T. HAWKINS Times Radio Editor Reorganization of Indianapolis Broadcasting, Inc. (> operators of WKBF was announced today by Charles C. Dawes, vice-president of the new organization. William E. Vogelback has been named president of the company and Edmund J. Haugh, secretarytreasurer. Jim Carpenter will remain as manager of the station. New studio equipment and construction, new transmitting apparatus of the latest design and addition of new broadcast features are included in the contemplated changes which will be placed in effect. “No changes are to be made in the personnel of the station,” Dawes, nephew of General Charles G. Dawes, former Vice-President, said. Regarding repeated rumors that the station may become a unit in the NBC system, Dawes said: “We are endeavoring to become affiliated with the National Broadcasting Company, because we believe the programs this association offers will please Indianapolis listeners and greatly will augment our present facilities.” Policy of the station to carry every available local feature will not be changed, Dawes said.
FLIER RAGING TIMEJN DASH Expects to Span Nation Twice in 24 Hours. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12. —Colonel Roscoe Turner, Pacific coast speed pilot, left United airport at 2:34 a. m. today for an attempted one-day flight to New York and return. Turner was flying his streamlined Wedell-Williams Gilmore Cub plane with a limited fuel supply. He planned three stops eastward, at Albuquerque, Kansas City and Columbus, and hoped to arrive at Floyd Bennett airport before noon, and back in Los Angeles tonight. Turner hoped to • break Jimmy Haizlip’s eastern trans-continental record of 10 hours and 19 minutes. This record was established last summer during the national air races. Turner finished the Bendix race in second place, flying the same ship in which he hopped off today. Refuels at Kansas City. By United Press , v KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 12. Colonel Roscoe Turner, speed pilot, attempting a record round trip cross-country flight, refueled at the municipal airport here today. He landed at 10:45 a. m. and took off at 10:50 a. m. His plane was functioning perfectly, he said. STATE G. 0. P. IS EVEN Parrty Ended Campaign Without Deficit, Morgan Says. The Republican state committee ended the recent campaign without deficit, Ivan C. Morgan, chairman, reported today. Morgan said he would continue as state chairman and that the committee would be able to finance itself for another year. He plans to call a meeting of the state committee soon.
J fc This is going to be one of the most hotly argued questions to come before congress early in December. In view of the recent elections, just what is the status of the beer question ? It’s not as simple as you might think. Anew series of stories taking up j ah angles of the beer question impartially, begins Monday in The Times l * =|i|ll Ljrgw-:rr^
EUROPEANS TO UNITE IN DRIVE ON WARDEBTS Three More Nations to Join France and Britain to Ask for Relief. DELAY TO BE ASKED Want Entire Discussion Held Up Until Roosevelt Takes Office. BY JOSEPH H. BAIRD United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—Italy, Poland and Czechoslovakia were expected today to join Great Britain and France shortly in a campaign for relief from war debts due the United States. A French note regarding the debts was delivered to State Secretary Henry L. Stimson Friday night. The British note arrived a day earlier. It was learned today that the state department plans to make public the texts of the French and British notes in morning newspapers next Monday. President Herbert Hoover is scheduled to reach Washington at 10 a. m. Tuesday on his return from the west coast. While both Britain and France want a readjustment of their whole funding agreements with this country, it was not known whether their notes advanced definite proposals along this line. Officials intimated the notes probably asked postponement of $123,000,000 due Dec. 15, pending reconsideration of the entire debt question perhaps next spring. Decision Up to Congress Such postponement would delay a new settlement until the Roosevelt administration is established in office. It was predicted in informed circles that President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt would be asked for his reaction to the French and British notes. However, under the existing debt agreements, neither Mr. Hoover nor Mr. Roosevelt can do more than grant postponement of payments of principal. Only congress, convening just ten days before the payments are due, can grant extensions of payments of interest—the larger of the two items. And Senator David Reed (Pa.), ranking Republican on the senate finance committee, declared congress would grant no respite. Reed, recently returned from a tour of Europe, felt that the debtors could pay if they wanted to. Some government economists, however, thought it would be difficult for Great Britain to make the transfers. France Could Pay Bill France, having vast gold reserves stored up, could meet her payment, it is agreed here. But since her statesmen conditionally wiped out the major part of German reparations, popular French opinion strongly opposes continuing payments to the United States on the present basis. Reed said general European opinion that the United States was a harsh creditor was “based on a complete misunderstanding.” “They do not realize that we issued bond" to raise the money loaned to them, and that these bonds have to be paid,” he said. “The average European thinks that the money came from a great reservoir.”
ROOSEVELT BETTER President-Elect Remains at Home in Seclusion. By United Press ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 12.—Presi-dent-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt remained in seclusion of the executive mansion today rapidly recovering from a slight cold. Household attendants said that a temperature which accompanied was speedily diminishing. “He is seeing no one,” they said, “and is determined to carry out his three-day rest.” CALLS BRIEF HEARINGS IN VETERANS’ INQUIRY McDuffie Sidesteps Plans for Wholesale Soldier Economies. By Scripps-H oxcard, Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—Brief hearings late this month and a study of the various veterans’ laws comprise the scope of the congressional investigation of expenditures for ex-soldiers as now contemplated by Representative John McDuffie (Dem., Ala.). He is head of the house group of the joint congressional committee created last session to determine where economies could be made in expenditures for ex-soldiers. The inquiry generally had been regarded as the means tor determining accurately how much could be saved by the government In these large expenditures. Veterans’ expenditures total almost a billion dollars this fiscal year. Although such men as A1 Smith, Calvin Coolidge, Admiral Richard E. Byrd and others are supporting a nation-wide move to reduce expenditures in behalf of veterans, McDuffie’s plans appear to indicate that wholesale economies may not I* congress.
Entered as Second Class Mailer at PostoiTice, Indianapolis
CUBAN REFUGEES TELL OF TIDAL WAVE HORROR; DEATH TOLL IS GROWING
‘ATrip Faces You,’ Judge Tells Fortune of Seers
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Left to Right—Four children of Mrs. Ethel Smith: Harry, 4; Marie, 12; Goldie, 10, and Mary Helen, 6.
'And Evil Awaits If You Come Back,’ He Adds as a Warning. The population of Indianapolis will be decreased by eleven persons Monday morning and all because Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron today turned “fortune teller” in disposing of the cases of two “psychologists.” ' The cases were those of Mrs. Ethel Smith, 29, of 1013 South Meridian street, whose professional name is Madame Smith, and Mrs. Clara Boswell, 37, of 414 North Illinois street, who likewise uses the title “madame.” Cameron didn’t use tea leaves, a pack of cards or a crystal ball, but he did foresee that the two madames are going on a journey. He also indicated they would meet a "tall or short, light or dark man,' who would be attired in a policeuniform, if they failed to make the journey. Women Listen Tearfully The judge didn’t see any good fortune for the two Madames at the end of the journeys, but he did predict some ill fortune if they failed to make them. The ill fortune, he told them, would take the form of sixty-day terms in the women’s prison, and SSO and costs in fines, for telling fortunes. Cameron branded the women as fomenters of domestic discord by advising husbands and wives about martial problems. “You know you haven’t any supernatural powers,” the judge said,” and if you keep on giving this advice, you’re likely to have husbands shooting wives, or vice versa.” The women listened mutely and tearfully. Take the First Offer “Now do you want to get out of town by Monday morning or go to prison?” the judge asked. Both women, accompanied in court by their husbands, vigorously indicated they preferred the former alternative. Madame Smith is the mother of four children, Harry, 4; Mary Helen, 6; Goldie, 10, and Marie, 12. Also part of the Smith household are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, the children’s grandparents, and an aunt. They intend to return to Dayton, 0., from where they came to Indianapolis almost a month ago. Destination of the Boswells, both Madame and “Monsieur,” is undecided.
‘MEN WANTED’ SIGNS TO GO UP HERE IF BEER RETURNS
• “When beer comes back—” That phrase is on the tip of many an Indianapolis business man’s tongue these days. With wet sentiment steadily increasing, men in many varied lines of industry are taking stock of what repeal may mean to their concerns. Klee & Coleman, beverage distributors, today declared that their breweries, the Falls City Beverage Company of Louisville, Ky., are prepared to have beer of any named alcoholic content on the market on two hours’ notice. “We estimate that If beer were to be legalized, we would ship about 150 carloads a year into this city,” said W. K. Washburn, sales manager. “That would be about double our present shipments of near beer. “The additional shipments would, of course, mean that we would need more men to junkad and load, and
CITY SHIVERS; COLDTOSTAY Temperature Plunges to 24, 8 Below Freezing. Chill winds and snow flurries swept the city today after the mercury skidded to eight degrees below freezing for the first time in the season. While motorists hurried to filling stations for radiator anti-freeze solutions and pedestrians hugged sheltered sides of downtown streets, temperature at 6 today dropped to 24. The low Friday was 27. Prospects of continued cold but clear weather for toriight and Sundya wefe announced by J. H. Armington, weather forecaster. An area of snow, which for two days has gripped the central west and western plains, has passed to the eastward, although there are no signs of a letup in the cold, he said. Lower lake states, Indiana and Illinois are feeling the effects of zero temperatures in the far northwest and Canada, where winter’s siege definitely has begun. Armington predicted that the mercury may drop to 26 tonight or early Sunday. GANDHI THREATENS TO RESUME DEATH FAST Asserts Temple Must Be Opened to Hindu Untouchables, By United Press POONA; British India, Nov. 12. The Mahatma Gandhi announced today he would resume his fast Jan. 1 if Teuruayur temple is not opened to Hindus of the untouchable caste. The Indian holy man revealed his intention to a United Press correspondent who was received in Gandhi’s jail cell. He had not regained his strength from his previous fast. Injured Fatally by Auto By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Nov. 12. Thomas E. Moss, Terre Haute, 73, was fatally injured Friday night when he was struck by an automobile driven by Ivan Neidlinger, Ferguson Hill.
additional drivers. And we might need one or two more men in the office.” Increase of $50,000 to $75,000 yearly in the pay roll is anticipated by H. C. Atkins, president of the E. C. Atkins and Company, saw manufacturers, “when beer comes back.” The Atkins concern is one of two in the United States making saws and knives for the manufacturers of tight barrels. And beer means lots of tight barrels. “Fifty additional men making saws is a conservative estimate of our needs if the prohibition laws were repealed,” Atkins declared. "I do not know what increase we would show in sales of our other saws, but there surely would be a greater demand for many different kinds. “Trees—hardwoods—would have to be sawed down and the logs cut into stay*. “That means additional £tws, and more mm to nuke them.” i
HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents
Most of 1,500 Who Fled From Destroyed City Are Injured. ‘SOUL-SICKENING SIGHT’ Relief Worker Says He Is Sure 2,000 Perished in Hurricane. BY LAWRENCE HAAS Vnlted Press Staff Correspondent (Coovriaht. 1932. bv United Press! CAMAGUEY, Cuba, Nov. 12.—The last pitiful contingent of the 1,500 refugees from' the stricken town of •Santa Cruz del Sur, wiped off the map by a tidal wave in Wednesday’s hurricane, was distributed among the emergency hospitals here today. Most of them were injured. Estimates of the dead in the obliterated town ranged from an undeniably conservative 1,000 to as high as 2,000. In addition, many more dead were reported from other parts of Camaguey province, and from Santa Clara province. An official telegram to President Gerardo Machado from Naricso Onetti, secretary of public works, who is directing relief in Santa Cruz, estimated probably 1,000 dead and 700 injured. Soul-Sickening Spectacle Dario Castillo, Camaguey attorney, who returned here after aiding the relief work, said: “I am sure 2,000 perished. The site where Santa Cruz stood is a soul-sickening spectacle that I will never forget. “It is a city of the past. Nobody remains except a few distracted, obdurate refugees searching among the dead for relatives, and small squads of volunteer workers. “The latter buried 472 bodies today. They will burn-the other bodies, which still are strewn for several miles around.” The last survivors, numbering about 500, arrived in a train of ten coaches shortly before midnight All were underclad and some had no clothes at all. Barefooted women were wrapped in sheets and towels. Groups of survivors, who had arrived on earlier trains, searched vainly and in tears for missing relatives. • Fail to Find Children The United Press correspondent failed to note a single joyous reunion as bereft mothers and fathers piteously scanned the faces of the arrivals, looking for their children. The women of Camaguey, from those high in society to the working class, labored faithfully night and day in the emergency hospitals, some of which still were lighted by candles and oil lamps, pending full restoration of the electric service. Lack of w'ater caused great hardship. The pain of many was accentuated by grief over the fate of their relatives. Blinded in Rescue Work Asa typical case, the writer saw one comely young mother lying swathed in bandages in Dr. Lamar’s emergency hospital. She had lost one child by drowning and her other two died after emergency operations here. She had not yet been informed of their death. One man arrived at the hospital carrying in his arms a 2-year-old child suffering from a bad wound in the head. The man dazed, said he did not know who the boy was or where he had picked him up. Dr. Micheul Agramonte, a Santa Cruz lawyer, among the injured survivors, nearly was blinded by the water while engaged in rescue work. “I tried to rescue my fiancee and her mother in the swirling water but I lost them both. Swimming and struggling against the current. I had hold of my fiancee, but when I dived for her mother, she sank. I searched among the bodies for hours after the water receded, but could not find either of them." Shoots Self in Grief A leading resident of Santa Cruz, Lingo San Pelayo, shot himself to death in grief when he identified the bodies of his mother, his sister and his fiancee. Vivar Hoffman, editor of the local newspaper Camagueyano, who visited Santa Cruz, told the United Press he saw hundreds of dead lying in the ruins and some haaging in fences and tree branches where they were left by the receding waters He reported twenty dead in Bocar, a mile from the water, where they sought refuge, but were drowned. Red Cross Lends Aid By United Prctt WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—The American Red Cross today contributed $5,000 to the relief of Cuban sufferers. Auto Death Is Probed By United Pr'ett mCHIGAN CITY, Ind.. Nov. 12. —An inquest into the death of Edward Rosentreter, 40, railroad crossing watchman, was planned today following the arrest of Charles W. McConnell, 45, Chicago accountant and resident of the Long Beach Shore Line resort near here. McConnell is charged with driving while intATjcßted,
