Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 225, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1933 Edition 02 — Page 2

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NEW TYPE OF OFFICIALS FOR INDIANS URGED Roosevelt Asked to Search Carefully for Men to Guide Bureau. ThU in th* la*t of tHre#* %tori* on the Indian and the RnosetHt administration. BY MAX STI RS' Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON. Jan. 28,-Amer-ican Indians and their well-wishers are urging that their share of the Rocseveltian new deal be dealt them not only from Capitol Hill but from the White House. A program of new and juster laws, they claim, would be of little aid to their cause without a set of officials eager to enforce them. For this reason they are asking President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt to search the nation carefully before he mans the departments that touch their lives and property and hold power to decree the survival or ruin of their very civilizations. Primarily, the Indians are interested in the interior secretary and the two men who manage the Indian bureau under him, the commissioner of Indian affairs and his assistant. They are hoping that the new President will refuse to use any of these three positions as rewards for hi.t personal friends or his party's creditors. The Rest and the Worst The interior department has been headed by some of the best and some of the worst of the country's public officials. It has become famous under such secretaries as Carl Schurz and .James A. Garfield, who in his Republican heyday was one of the cabinet's shining stars. It also has become infamous under secretaries who conceived the big interior department as the great American grab bag. The Indians hope that Governor Roosevelt will follow the path of his famous cousin in selecting the interior secretary. The bureau of Indian affairs also has had a wide varifty of types as commission and assistant commissioner. Here is an Indian estate of huge size and almost inestimable wealth. In spite of the inroads made by land-grabbing white men. the Indian domain still contains 50,000,000 acres. It is worth conservatively at least $1,000,000,000. It contains immense deposits of oil and shale, asbestos, zino, coal, asphalt and precious metals. It embraces timber lands worth at least $100,000,000. It has undeveloped water power upon which hungry power companies have looked for years. Without this imperial domain lurk eager privateers of every sort hoping for a return of the days when the Indians’ lands were happy hunting grounds for white adventurers. Within it grinds the 100-year-old ‘•system" that lias enmeshed in its tangle-foot of red tape and precedent the best-intentioned commissioners of the past. In face of such external and internal obstacles, to force a fundamental reformation of Indian administration requires, the Indians claim, officials of exceptional courage, capability, sympathy and understanding.

RALPH GREGG SLATED TO BE G. 0. P. BOSS Scheduled to Be Named City Chairman at Meeting; Today. Reorganization of the Republican city committee, with Ralph B. Gregg scheduled for election as city chairman, was to be effected at a meeting of precinct committeemen this afternoon at 1 in the Riley room of the Clavpool. In preparation for the 1933 municipal campaign, seven Republican groups in the city and county have been canvassed and all are reported agreeable to Gregg's selection. All other officials will be replaced this afternoon, bringing about the retirement of Wayne Emmelman, who has served through several successive campaigns as city and county committee secretary. The Democratic city convention will be held Feb. 25. Edgar Hart, county chairman, against whom Gregg was a candidate last year, will preside today. Party leaders assert the reorganization will be the most harmonious in years. Gregg, an attorney, has been a precinct committeeman in the Fourth ward for the last six years. Gregg is married, resides at 3115 North Illinois street, is active in American Legion circles and is a member of the faculty of Benjamin Harrison law school.

CENTRALIZED WEALTH ATTACKED BY OXNAM National l T phraval May Result, Warns I>e Pauw President. Centralization of wealth in the hands of the few, and failure to remove social fault lines in America, will be the chief factors in a national upheaval unless corrected, said Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, president of De Pauw university, at a meeting Friday of the Exchange Club. The nation's greatest danger, he said, is that its masses, not given intelligent leadership, will follow demagogues who will steer the way to disaster. He pointed out there is no justification for the types of pessimism which causes men to think the end of modern civilization is at hand. He urged America to take warning from the experiences of other nations which did not remove social faults until the upheaval came. AGED MAN SHOOTS KIN No Room at Table for Him. He Fires on Niece’s Son-in-Law. By United I‘nut HIGHTRTOWN. N. J„ Jan. 28 There was no room at the breakfast table for James Fischer. 79. Angered, he took his bowl of cereal to the kitchen. Soon he returned with a revolver and shot Kelton Pearce. 30. son-in-law of his niece. The bullet struck iPearce in the jaw. He wall recover.

YOUNGER OF Tw6 BROTHERS LOSES LIFE

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Clay Parker (left) who doesn’t know that his younger brother John, shown with him, is dead front auto accident injuries. John died early today at city hospital. <Story on Page One.)

$1,000,000 Fraud Plot Is Laid to Insurance Head Chief of Leading Chicago Hotel Is Arrested on Eve of Sailing for Europe, Say Officers. By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 28.—Ernest J. Stevens, financial magnate who was a director of the recently collapsed Illinois Life Insurance Company and the Stevens hotel, was under arrest here today, lie provided bond of SIO,OOO.

State's Attorney Courtney obtained the warrant for Stevens’ arrest. Courtney said he acted after learning that Stevens and his family had obtained passports for European travel, and had planned to sail next Monday. Stevens was ordered to appear before Judge Philip L. Sullivan in criminal court Monday on a charge of conspiring to defraud the life insurance company of $1,000,000, Arrest in Lavish Home At the same time, according to Courtney, a grand jury investigation of collapse of the insurance company will begin. Stevens, as head of one of the midwest's most prominent hostelcries and the largest life insurance company in the state, has been a prominent figure in financial circles. He also headed the Lasalle hotel here, which was linked with his other holdings. Two police squads arrested Stevens in his palatial home. He protested when they failed to produce a warrant, but was held under guard until other officers brought the warrant. His wife stood by and his three sons chatted with friends upstairs while the warrant was read. Two Others Accused He was taken to detective headquarters, where he signed the arrest slip and bond, and was permitted to return to his home. Stevens’ 80-year-old father, James W. Stevens, and his brother, Raymond W. Stevens, were named in the charges as co-conspirators. It was alleged that more than $10,000,000 insurance assets were frozen in operation of the two hotels. The insurance company held $150,000,000 in policies. HUGE TRADE BOARD CUT STIRS LIBERALS' WRATH Proposed 65 Per rent Slash to Bring Bitter Congress Fight. By Bcripps-Haward Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Jan. 29.—A 65 per cent cut in appropriations for the federal trade commission, proposed by the house appropriations committee, will be fought by liberals in both houses of congress. It may become an issue in the Speakership fight in the house since Representative Joseph Byrns <Dem.. TcnnJ, one of the candidates for Speaker, is chairman of the committee rec Pnmending the cut. President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt's friends on Capitol Hill believe he favors a strong federal trade commission. The 65 per cent cut is the largest imposed on any agency of the government since the economy drive commenced two years ago. The commission is spending $1,466,500 this year. The budget bureau recommended $1,109,550 for 1934, and the commission appealed for an additional $105,000. The house committee recommended that a total of $510,000 be allowed. If the recommendation is followed no economic investigations of any kind can be carried on. •ROUND WORLD' IN CITY Indianapolis Postoffice Trucks Travel 174,751 Miles in Last Year. Indianapolis postoffice trucks traveled 174.751 miles, equal to seven times around the world, with only eighteen minor accidents, in the three months ending Dec. 31. Postmaster Leslie D. Clancy said today. Considering traffic conditions, especially during the Christmas rush. Clancy said, mail truck operators appear to have proven themselves careful drivers. Clancy said the department saved about $2,300 by borowing trucks for Christmas deliveries from Ft. Benjamin Harrison and the national guard. He estimated it would have cost $5 800 to rent trucks needed during the holiday rush, whereas it cost only $3,500 to operate the borrowed tracks.

58-DAY REPRIEVE IS GIVEN RUTH JUDD Wins First Battle to Escape Gallows Feb. 17. By 1 ii itrd Press PHOENIX. Ariz., Jan. 28.—Winnie Ruth Judd, condemned slayer, won her first battle to escape the gallows Friday when the state pardons and paroles board recommended a fifty-cighi-day reprieve. The petition needed only Governor B. B. Moeur’s formal approval to extend until April 14, the hanging originally set for Feb. 17. The board urged a temporary stay to allow time for a complete hearing and investigation of Mrs. Judd’s plea for clemency. Her attorneys were hopeful the action was a step toward ultimate cancellation of the death sentence.

INTERVENTION LOOMS IN GRAN CHACO WAR League of Nations Decides to Step In, Is Report. By 1 nited Press GENEVA, Jan. 28. —Direct intervention by the League of Nations in the unofficial Chaco war between Bolivia and Paraguay appeared probable today. The league's Chaco committee, in secret session, has decided to dispatch a commission of three to supervise cessation of hostilities providing Bolivia and Paraguay agree to such a procedure. The proposed commission would be composed of one Argentine, one North American, probably from the United States, and one European. The Chaco committee asked the Bolivian and Paraguayan delegates to ascertain whether their governments would accept such a proposal. The proposal was made as result of urgent pressure upon (he league to halt the war. in which almost 4.000 were killed or wounded in the last week. ALEXANDER SCOTT DEAD Former Indanapolis Man Is Taken Mhile on Business Trip. Alexander Scott. 52. Chicago, formerly a resident of Indianapolis, died unexpectedly Friday while on a business trip in La Crosse. Wis. Mr. Scott moved to Chicago two years ago. He formerly was the owner of the Alex Scott Coffee Company. and still retained an interest in that organization. He was a member of • Mystic Tie lodge No. 398. F. & A. M.: the Kiwanis Club, the Murat 'Shrine, the Scottish Rite and the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon in the Flanner Sc Buchanan mortuary. 25 West Fall Creek boulevard. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. * R. K. 0. RECEIVER NAMED Trust Company Is Chosen by Federal Judge; Subsidiary Is Bankrupt. Bp United Press NEW YORK. Jan. 28.—Federal Judge William Bondy Friday appointed the Irving Trust Company receiver in equity for the Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation. The Irving Trust Company also was appointed receiver in bankruptcy for Orpheum Circuit, Inc., a subsidiary which Friday filed a voluntary petition m? bankruptcy.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

INSURGENTS TO ATTACK BEER CONTROL BILL 100 Amendments Will Be Proposed in House on Tuesday. Administration leaders, secure in the belief the beer control bill will pass the house in its present form, are due for a Stiff floor battle Tuesday, when approximately 100 amendmends will be proposed as the bill comes down for second reading. The house will convene at 10 Monday and the senate at 2. Leaders of the insurgent house wets are marshaling their strength for a battle to get in a draught beer provision and to spike what they term monoply powers conferred on the excise director. Representative Lenhardt E. Bauer iDem., Terre Haute) will propose draught beer, and Representative Eugene Martin (Dem., FT. Wayne) ha ready scores of line amendments, most of which change the word "may’’ to ‘shall” where it refers to the excise director, making many of his duties mandatory instead of discretionary. Martin Friday blocked party leaders’ efforts to rush the bill to third reading after Representative John F. Ryan <Dem„ Terre Haute), chairman of the public morals committee, proposed several administration amendments. Rush Move Quashed As Ryan’s last amendment was introduced, Representative Edward H. Stein, Bloomfield, majority floor leader, urged the bill be put on third reading immediately, which would have made it ready for passage Monday. Martin demanded a point of order and moved the bill be made a special order of business for Tuesday. ’’There's no rush,” Martin pointed out. “This bill only was printed yesterday. It's important enough to be read carefully.” While he was speaking, Ryan circulated about the chamber, urging members to rush the bill through. Speaker Crawford was dubious about the voice vote, but a standing vote showed fifty-four votes against the rush move. Repealer Is Delayed The Wright bone dry repeal bill passage, delayed Friday because eight members of the house prison affairs committee are on an inspection trip of Indiana institutions, will come down for final passage Monday. Balloting will be only a formality with a few dry Democrats joining the slender Republican minority. Approximately a dozen resolutions from varfcus parts of the state, protesting “any legislation tending to weaken or repeal the present Indiana dry laws,” were presented to the house shortly before adjournment Friday. All were referred to the public morals committee. Most important of the new legislation introduced in the house Friday, aside from the new administration reorganization bill, was a legislative reapportionment measure. Senate Receives Rill Sponsored by Representative J. Clinn Ellyson (Dem., Hammond), the measure would increase the representatives of the urban counties. Marion county representatives would be increased from eleven to twelve, in addition to keeping the one joint representative with Johnson county. Lake, St. Joseph and Allen counties also would gain. Aside from receiving the McNutt bill reorganizing the state government and passing a resolution congratulating President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt on his fifty-first birthday, which will occur Monday, nothing was done in the senate Friday. Teacher tenure remains a bone of contention in the upper house. Next week it is likely the matter will be settled either by passage of a bill for outright repeal of the tenure law 7, or one amended to make tenure optional.

REMODELING CAMPAIGN TALKED BY BUILDERS Stress Plan as Means of Giving Additional Employment. Proposal for a campaign to stimulate remodeling and rehabilitation of property to provide additional employment was discussed at a meeting Friday of the new building trades division of the Chamber of Commerce. The group, which was organized at the meeting under chairmanship of Milton K. Foxworthy, is composed of representative leaders in the building industry. A committee to study methods used in other cities to stimulate employment of building trades craftsmen was named. Members are Hugh J. Baker, president of Hugh J. Baker & Cos., chairman; Otto N. Mueller, architeci; Albert S. Pierson, Pierson - Lewis Hardware Company; Robert S. Foster. R. S. Foster Lumber Company, and Richard H. Shirley, W. H. Johnson Sc Son Company. BOOST COST OF NAVY’S NEW AIRPLANE CARRIER While Economy Is Urged, Congress Moves to Spend 21 Millions on Ship. By Scripps. Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Jan. 28.—The house appropriations committee is making slashes right and left in departmental appropriations, but the house naval affairs committee just has reported favorably a bill to increase by $2,000,000 the cost of the new navy aircraft carrier Ranger. If the this bill passes, and it has the backing of the navy, the administration and the naval committee, this new vessel will cost a total of $21,000,000. It appears, from the committee report, that while the Ranger might be completed under the original 519.000.000 authorization, the additional two million is to modernize it. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m.: W’est northwest wind, ten miles an hour; temperature, 27; barometric pressure, 110.15 at sea level; ceiling, overcast, light freezing mist and light fog, 700 feet; visibility, 11* miles; field, wet.

IT’S PING-PONG TIME—AND WATCH THAT CROWD BOUNCE UP AND DOWN

Ping and Pong did a bouncing brother act today and Friday on the eighth floor of L. S. Ayres Company as the Indiana state ping-pong tourney was held. The semi-finals and finals were held today before a grandstand of rooters. Admission is free. Upper—Rooting for their favorite “pinger” finds this grand-

HOME OF STEEL BOMBED Four Escape Death; Police Blame Labor Radicals in Youngstown. By United Press YOUNGSTOWN, 0., Jan. 28.—A. W. Smith, general superintendent of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company, and three members of bis family escaped death early today in a bomb explosion that wrecked the front of the Smith dwelling. A second and larger Domb failed to explode. Police attributed the bombing to labor radicals and guards u r ere placed over homes of other sheet and tube officials. The homes of Frank Purnell, president; W. C. Riley, vice-president, and W. B. Gillies, general manager of the Youngstown district, were searched, but no bombs were found. Film Actress Wins Divorce CHICAGO, Jan. 28.—Veree Teasdale, beautiful blond screen actress, won a divorce here Friday from William O'Neal, an actor. She charged desertion. They were married in 1927.

Six Are Hurt, Two Badly, in City Auto Accidents

One Driver Held by Police, Charged With Failure to Stop. Six persons were injured, two seriously, in traffic accidents in the city Friday night and today. W. M. Gill, 56, of 863 Camp street, Negro, employe of Indianapolis Railways, Inc., was injured early today when he was struck by an automobile driven by Morau V. Schakelford, 44, of 2407 East Fortieth street. At city hospital it was said Gill’s leg was broken, and he had received head and chest injuries. His condition is critical. Schakelford was not held. Fracture of the skull and a compound fracture of the right leg were suffered by Frank Krebs, 56, of 1136 Kentucky avenue, early Friday night when he was struck by an automobile in front of his home. The automobile was driven by Charles Cauldwell, 19, of R. R. 3, Box 901. Krebs was sent to city hospital. Cauldwell was not held. An 80-year-old man, William De Bruler, 407 East Ohio street, is in city hospital with a fractured right leg received when he stepped in front of a moving automobile at New Jersey and Ohio streets early Friday night. The'driver was not held. Robert Dilley, 30, of 2175 North Riley avenue, was cut by fiying glass when his automobile was struck by a truck in the 600 block North Davidson street. Driver of the truck, John Staley, of 2260 North Tacoma avenue, is alleged to have left the scene when Dilley called police. Staley is held on charges of vagrancy and failure to stop after an accident. When the automobile in which Carl Thomas, 19, of Anderson, was riding Friday night, overturned on state road 67, near Arlington avenue. he suffered back and internal injuries and several broken ribs. Carl Schwartz of Anderson, driver of the car was not injured. He told police he had been blinded by lights of approaching cars. Face and head cuts were received by Frank Baker, 9, of 2218 North Sherman drive, Friday night, when he was struck by an automobile driven bv Max Merrick, 17, of 51 North Arlington avenue. 3 HURT IN EXPLOSION Diesel Engine Blows Up in Class; Lieutenants Badly Hurt. By United Press OAKLAND, Cal., Jan. 27.—Three naval reserve lieutenants were injured seriously Friday when a Diesel engine exploded among a class of thirty University of California post graduate students in the Standard Gas Engine Works here. Those injured were K. C. Hurd, L. D SLm p* and V. E. McDonald, (

stand a self-conscious one when photographers appear. A few ducked heads under hats when the photo was shot rather than appear to be cheating on the "bass.” The followers of the white pellet leave their hats and coats on just as if they were sitting in cold-sw 7 ept stadium watching a gridiron battle. Lower Left—Jerry Jacobs, 4955

Out With ’Em Arkansas Legislator in Move to Rid State of Northern Teachers.

'?// United Press LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Jan. 28. Charging that many faculty members of the University of Arkansas are “foreigners" and “extreme northerners,” Representative H. S. Grant introduced a resolution in the general assembly Friday asking that John C. Futrell be dismissed as president of the university at Fayetteville, Ark. The resolution charges that 75 per cent of the instructors at the university are “foreigners of the rankest kind and extreme northerners, being big-headed and thinking the southerners have no sense at all. “We pay a half million or more dollars per year to pay salaries alone—we pay them so they can go to foreign countries to spend their vacations, while we, who pay, can not take our wives out of the kitchen during summer.”

Hard to Pick Tipton Council Votes 165 Times Before Mayor Is Elected.

By United Press Tipton, Ind., Jan. 28.—Tipton’s city council voted 165 times before it could elect a mayor Friday night. W. A. Compton, hardware merchant, was elected mayor on the 165th ballot. Not until then was a3to 1 vote cast. He succeeds Lee F. Griffith, who resigned a few weeks ago. With one councilman, Guy Newkirk, ill in a hospital only four members voted in the election. P. W. Utterback, council president and acting mayor, and H. A. Binkley were other candidates. All, including Compton, who is a former mayor, are Republicans. CITY WIDOW IS DEAD Taken to Hospital Following Illness of Five Months. Following an illness of five months, Mrs. Mary E. Bullard, 40, of 1823 Fletcher avenue, died Friday in Methodist hospital. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 Sunday in the Forest Hill chapel. Burial will be in Lower Union cemetery, near Forest Hill. Mrs. Bullard was the widow of Alvis Bullard, Big Four railroad switchman, who died a few hours after he fell from a box car near Sherman drive, July 29, 1931. She was a member of the Forest Hill Presbyterian church.

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Washington boulevard, on? of the semi-finalists shown receiving the “congrats” of his defeated opponent, Merle Arens, Dayton, 0., champion of northern Ohio. Lower Right—Jacobs with Dick Mills, 3129 Ruckle street, city champion, are two of the favorites for the championship. Mills is shown here in demonstrating his stroking ability.

CONVICT ‘NO. r ON GUNCNARGE Capone Successor Laughs: Prepares Appeal to High Court. By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 28.—Murray Humphries, successor to Scarface A1 Capone as Chicago’s “public enemy No. 1,” was found guilty late Friday on a charge of having carried a concealed weapon. “I expected that,” said the handsome Humphries, smiling, as he stalked from the courtroom while his attorneys arranged bond, and hearing on a motion for anew trial was set for Feb. 4. Humphries, who claims he is an honest business man who has been thrown into the gangster classification by business enemies, was found guilty by a jury in Municipal Judge Harold O’Connell's court. “That’s what a man must expect when he’s caught carrying a gun,” he commented. “But I'm willing to rest my case with the supreme court.” If the sentence stands, Humphries is liable to a maximum sentence of one year in jail and a S3OO fine.

ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE RAPS WET -POLITICIANS’ Drys Urged to Take Advantage of ‘Legal Liquor Errors.’ Staggering blow was dealt the dry cause by “politicians who delivered their parties to the anti-prohibition forces,” it is asserted in resolutions adopted by directors of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League in a meeting Friday. The resolutions urge continuance of the dry fight and an educational campaign for temperance. Foes of liquor are urged to take advantage of “blunders that the opposition js sure to make if liquor is legalized.” Signers of the resolutions were the Rev. T. F. Williams, Lafayette; the Rev. A. F. Knepp, Warsaw; the Rev. J. Newton Jessup, Lafayette, and H. O. Miles, financial secretary of Earlham college, Richmond. Bishop H. H. Fout, Indianapolis, was re-elected president of the state organization and L. E. York was renamed superintendent.

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28, 1933

CUT MILLION OFF U. S. DRY AGENT FUNDS House Votes to Ban Wire Tapping, Paid Spies and Buying Evidence. RV THOMAS L. STOKES I nited Press SttT Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, Prohibition enforcement funds were cut more than a million dollars, and wire tapping, paid informers and purchase of evidence were banned Friday by the house in the wets’ first successful attack on federal enforcement and its methods. In a veritable anti-prohibition field day, the house reduced appropriations for the federal prohibition bureau from $9,599,948, recommended by President Hoover, to $8,440,000, cut of $1,159,948. This represents a reduction of $680,000 from the $9,120,000 fund approved by the appropriations committee. The house also amended the pending justice, state, commerce and labor department bill to prohibit use of any money appropriated for wire tapping, purchase of liquor, paid informers or "stool pigeons” and purchase of evidence, methods often criticised. Action was in committee of the whole without record votes. It is subject to record votes later which may upset the wet victories Friday. All were by narrow margins. Federal Prohibition Administrator Amos Woodcock appeared somewhat discomfitted by the day’s work, but said it would be “poor taste" for him to comment since the cuts become effective in the next administration. They apply for the fiscal year 1934, beginning next July 1. He referred questioners to his testimony before the appropriations committee in which he urged need of the amount recommended by the President, and defended practices barred today as essential to cope | with the organized racketeers and ! gangsters. He said his bureau’s effectiveness against organized criminals would be reduced. The enforcement fund as it now stands in the house bill is the smallest ever provided by congress. For the current year it is $10,125,000.

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