Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1933 — Page 9

JUNE 6, im.

COUNTY PAUPER LAWYER QUITS OVER LOW PAY Andrew Jacobs’ Resignation Comes After Two Years of Service. BY JAMES A. C'ARYIN Time* Staff Writer Resignation of Andrew Jacobs, 4345 Fletcher avenue, as county pauper attorney, was announced today by Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker. Jacobs’ resignation became effective June 1, following two and a

half years’ service since Jan 1. 1931. Inadequacy of the $.50 monthly salary allotted pauper attorneys and press of private practice were the reasons given by Jacobs for his resignation. “While I regret deeply that Jacobs will not continue in his post, I am in romplete sympathy with his reasons for re-

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signing,’’ Baker stated. “Since he assmued the post, the number of rases handled by pauper attorneys has increased tremendously, requiring practically all of Jacobs' time for their preparation. Conscientious and Capable “He has been conscientious and capable, although his compensation for an entire month has been much less than private attorneys receive for a single case.’’ Baker said he had reached no decision regarding a successor in the post. lii former years, a single pauper attorney was employed at a monthly salary of S2OO, Baker explained. At the time he took office. Baker arranged for Jacobs, Edward McElfresh and James Bryant, Negro attorney, to share the assignments at a SSO monthly salary each. “The remaining S6OO in the budget was to be held for emergencies, such as out-of-town cases, in-, vestigation and other expenses incidental in protecting the interest of defendants unable to hire an attorney,'' Baker explained. Expenses From Own Salaries “When the county council found that the money was not being spent in any definite manner, the S6OO was slashed, leaving the court with three underpaid attorneys and a large increase in the amount of work. I know that it is necessary for these attorneys to spend out of their salaries for expenses in their cases. For instance, Jacobs, who obtained an acquittal for Stanley Parker In his recent trial for murder, was forced to travel to Shelbyville daily.” Hornier Postmasters Named WASHINGTON, June 6. Postmaster General Farley today appointed the following acting postmasters: Greentown, Ind., Ellis Cates, and Hanna, Ind., Ralph F. Yeoman.

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Radio Dial Twisters

—a r m KYW 1 1020'—Irwin’* orchestra CBS- Mary Eastman. *oorano. NBC Sanderson. Cnimlt Shilkrets orchestra to WEAK WON - 720* Palmer ensemble. NBC Crimp Club to WJZ. —#1:1.1 P. M KYW ilo2oi Lopez orchestra CBS The magic voice WLB 1 870'—College Inn orchestra —#s 30 P M.— KYW (1020i Three Spasm*. CBS— Kate Smith NBC —Dr Bundesen to WJZ WBBM 1 770' Drama Count of Monte Crlsto NBC—Wayne King and orchestra to WEAK. —6:45 P. M CBS -Lvman orchestra and Irvine Kaufman. WBBM #770 >-Guv Lombardo and orchestra. NBC--Annie. Judle & Zeke to WJZ. —7 P. W CBS—Wayfaring men. NBC- Ben Barrie and orchestra to WEAK NBC—Gladys Swarthout. soprano to WJZ WMAQ I S7O I American conservation proeram. —7:15 P. M—CBS—Threads of Happiness —7:30 P. M.— KYW (1020)—Fishers orchestra. CBS Nino Martini and Columbia symphony. NBC Ed. Wynn to WEAF. NBC Tune Detective to WJZ. —7:15 P. M.— KYW (1020j—Riverview orchestra. 1

\VFBi\I (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Companr) TUESDAY P M. 5:30- Bohemians 600 Brown Countv Revelers. 6:15- Magic voice iCBSt. 630 Kate Smith (CBS'. 6:4s—Hot from Hollywood (CBSt. 7 00—Wayfaring men ICBSI. 7 15 Threads of happiness ICCBSI. 7:3o—Nino Martini 'CBS) B:oo—California melodies (CBS). 8 30 Edwin C. Hill 'CBSt. 8 45—Columbia symphony (CBS'. ti:ls—Earl Gordon pianoloKue. 930 Jyrrv Friedman orchestra (CBSt. 10 00—Casa I.oma orchestra (CBS' 10:30 Leon Belasco orchestra iCBS). 11:00—Tallvho Club orchestra. 11:30—Sign off, WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (IndiananolU Broadcasting, Inc.) TUESDAY P M. 4 00 Twilight, treasure hour. 4:3o—Tea time tunes. 4 45 News flashes. 5:00 Musical menu. s:ls—Cecil and Sallv. s:3o—Aunt Dessa and Uncle Connie. 5:45 Mvron R. Green. 6 00 Knothole gang. 6 15- Hurrv Bason. 6:30 Recordings. 6 45 The sDortsiight. 7:00 —Devore sisters. 7:ls—Don McGibinev. 7 30- Connie’s orchestra. B:oo—George & Rufus. 8 15—Revue. 8 30—Tiie Pathfinder. 8 45—Jtnimv Anderson. 0:00 Rhineland melodies. 10 00—To be announced. 10 15—Art Berry’s orchestra 10:30 Dennv Dutton's orchestra. 10 45—Sl ortv Phillips orchestra. 11:00—Morrev Brennan’s orchestra. 11:30—Art Berry’s orchestra. 11:45—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati TUESDAY P M 4:00- Mme Frances Alda (NBCi. 4:30 Musical Highlights. 4:45- Lowell Thomas (NBC). s:oo—Amos ’n’ Andy. s:ls—Gene & Glenn. 5:30—80b Newhall. 5:45 Jack. Jill and Jecco. 6 00 -Crime Club (NBC'. 6:3o—Dr. Bundensen iNBCt. 6:4s—Dr. Byram and orchestra. 7:oo—Band. 7:15- Music Makers. 7:30- Ed Wynn (NBC). B:oo—Lives at Stake (NBC). B:3o—Cotton Queen Minstrels with Hink and Dink. o:oo—Castle Farm orchestra. 3:ls—Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9:3o—Theater of the Air. 10:00 Cotton Club dance orchestra (NBC), 10:30—Erigewater Beach hotel orchestra (NBC). 11:00—Charlie Agnew’s dance orchestra. 11:30—Golden Pheasant orchestra iNBC'. 12:00 Midnight—La Normandie Marimba

Jacobs

TUESDAY 1 —<* r- 1 - NBC—Pickens Sisters to. WJZ —8 P. M KYW (1020)—Globe Trotter; Brigode’s orchestra CBS—Paige s orchestra 1 .INBC - ’’Lives at Stake’’ to NBC -Edgar Ouest to WJZ. —8:15 P. M . WBBM (770) —Pollack s orchestra WON (720)—McCoy's Music Box. —8:30 P. M CBS—Edwin C. Hill . NBC—Nat l Radio Forum to WEAF. —8:45 P. M—-CBS-Barlow and Columbia Svmphonv. WBBM 1 770 1 Guy Lombardo's orchestra jWE NR (870)-.Morin Sisters '• WON (720) —Dances of the (Nations. P. M.— 1 KDKA (980) —Pettis’ orches-i tra. KYW (1020)-Sports: Fish--1 er’s orchestra WON (720i- Bride Club; 'I Dream Ship NBC—The Slzziers to WJZ NBC—Amos n’ Andy to, WSM. WDAF, WMAQ, , j WENR. —0:15 P. M.— WENR (870(—Sports. NBC Poet Prince to WJZ. i. WMAQ (670) Dan and, - Sylvia NBC—Flovd Gibbons to WLW WSM (650 1 —Ole Bill; Wal- , ler Bros. —0:30 P. M.— ' KYW (1020)—Canton or- 1 chestra. CBS—Friedman's orchestra. • NBC—Talkie Picture Time, I to WEAF.

Fishing the Air

Governor William T. Gardiner of Maine will head the list of distinguished speakers to be heard on the You and Your Government program over WENR and an NBC network at 5:15 p m.. Tuesday. The essential clue of a thrilling new murder mystery in which Spencer Dean is faced with the problem of trailing a killer who used a machine gun while strolling through the French shop of a great department store, will he given to listeners when the first episode of "The Getaway Girt” is presented during the Crime Clues broadcast over WLW and an NBC network at 6 p. m., Tuesday. Ben Bernie. the Ol’ Maestro who is heard now at the Casino at the Chicago World's Fair grounds, will offer an appropriately named number "Pretzels.” durine his program over WTAM and an NBC network at 7 n. m.. Tuesday.

HIGH SPOTS OF TUESDAY NIGHT’S PROGRAM 6:00 NBC (WJZ)—Crime club. 6:3O—NBC (WEAF)—W’ayne King and his orchestra. NBC (WJZ) Adventures in Health. Dr. Bundesen. 7:oo—Columbia—Wayfaring Men. NBC (WEAF)—Ben Bernies’ orchestra. 7:3O—NBC (WEAF)—Ed Wynn and band. Columbia—Nino Martini and Columbia symphony. 8:00—NBC (WEAF)—“Lives at Stake.” sketch. NBC (WJZ)—Musical Memories with Edgar Guest. Columbia —Five Star theater.

The famous “Largo” from Handel's "Xerxes.” one of the most popular of concert songs, will be featured by Nino Martini, tenor, when he appears with Howard Barlow and the Columbia Symphony orchestra. Tuesday from 7:30 to 8 p. m.. over WFBM and the Columbia network. The British Club and the rice fields of the Island of Penang, off the mainland of the Federated Malay States will furnish the locale for the Talkie Picture Time drama. "The Price.” to be heard over WENR and an NBC network at 9 30 p. in.. Tuesday.

, —:3O P. M.— WON <72o l—’ Wayne King’s j orchestra. NBC—Master Singers to WJZ. —9:10 P. M > WGN '72o—Cummin’s ori chestra —lO P. M KYW (1020>—Merry Garden orchestra. CBS—Gien Gray and or- ■ chestra INBC—Dream Singer. Stern’s j orchestra to WEAF. ’WENR (870) EppinofT's or- > chestra. NBC Ellington’s orchestra j to WJZ, ,! —10:10 P. M.— WGN (720i—Wayne King’s orchestra. —10:15 P. M , KYW (1020/ Riverview orP i chestra. WJR (750) — Ellington’s orI chestra. —10:30 P. M.— CBS—Belasco's orchestra. NBC—Bobbin's orchestra to WEAF NBC—Fisher s orchestra to WJZ WSM (650)—Craig’s orchesI tra. —II P. M!KYW (1020)—Canton or- , chestra. WENR (870) —Tait's orchestra. WGN (720)—Cummin's and Cole’s orchestras. WSM (650 1 —Orchestra. —11:30 P. M.— KYW (1020) —Lopez orchestra. —l2 Midnight— WBBM (770)—Around the l Town.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GLOOM SPREADS! AMONG DRYS AS DAY WEARS ON But They Keep Die-Hard Confidence in Face of Reports. Embattled drys, assembled in the j allied dry’ organization’s headquar- j ters in the Board of Trade building,, presented a strange melange of ; doleful resignation and die-hard j confidence as precinct reports came j in today on the repeal vote. As the day wore on. the atmosphere of part cheerfulness manifest in the early morning began to wane. All attempts to obtain from the drys a forecast as to the outcome of the vote were futile. An air of watchful waiting prevailed with an of doubt. Like a field marshal directing the onslaught of an army. Frank Sisson, executive secretary of the dry organization, marshalled his 1,500 workers. All day he listened feverishly to incoming telephone calls reporting alleged abuses in outlying precincts. All around him in the bare looking offices, fumished with a battered desk and a few board chairs and tables, a crowd of lugubrious ladies gathered in little groups to discuss the tactics of the wets. “You Did Just Right” Middle-aged women for the most part, they wore white signs lettered in black bearing the inscription ‘•DryWorker.” “So when the clerk at the polls tried to fold my sister’s ballot the wrong way, inside out you know, I just snatched it away from him and folded it right,” said a buxom worker indignantly, “Just right, you did just right,” a chorus of women answered. At the telephone Miss Rosemary Dyer, a pretty girl in green, assisted Sisson in giving instructions. “All right we'll report that to the election commissioners. Yes, we’ve had other complaints in that precinct. She turned to Sisson with a wide smile. Not a Cheerful Scene "That woman’s an ardent dry, she was moving today but she left some of her furniture in her old home to make sure she could vote,” she reported. Perspiring male workers rushed in and out of headquarters to report. A Negro messenger boy was | rushed on one errand after another, delivering ballots and messages to 1 the field workers. The scene was exciting, but not cheerful. Sisson paused to wipe his fore- i head. “We can't say how the vote will 1 go,” he said. “Harvey Hartsock, our superintendent, has been forced to stay at the election board all morning. We’re handicapped by one thing, lack of experience among our wefrkers. But the day isn't over yet—not by a long shot.” A TWA costing 27 cents sold a 75-pound refrigerator for C. Jordan, 728 East Thirty-fourth street.

RULES PACKERS

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Guy C. Shepard of Evanston, 111., has been named administrator of packing house products under the farm relief act. He is a former vice-president of the Cudahy Packing Company. CRAWFORD FORECASTS TRIUMPH FOR DRYS Wets to Have a Headache, He Says at Mass Meeting. Predicting Indiana would vote dry, Earl Crawford, Milton, speaker of the house of representatives, closed the local dry campaign with a mass meeting in the Roberts Park M. E. church Monday night. “If Indiana isn’t the first state to go dry in this fight over the eighteenth amendment, it will be the dryest wet state in the country,” Crawford declared. He insisted the theory of resubmission of the prohibition question to the people is right. Speaking under auspices of United Dry Forces, Crawford was introduced by Merle Sidener, advertising executive. From the platform, Crawford appealed for financial aid to help his organization make up a deficit in its campaign funds. “We are going to give them enough dry delegates to give them one headache,” he asserted. “In three counties I visited in this state the wets couldn’t get enough signatures to give their delegates a place on the ticket.”

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BOOK REVEALS BANKERS' RAIDS IN RAIL FAILURE ‘The Investor Pays’ Is Point Writer Brings Out in Receivership Story. By Brrippt-lloirani Xttc*paper Allianrr NEW YORK. June 6—A hint of what senate investigators may find as they continue their inquiry into big banking was given in Max Lowenthal's new book "The Investor Pays,” published by Alfred Knopf. It links the private banking firms of Kuhn, Loeb 6c Cos. and J. P. Morgan & Cos. as being “considerate” of each other, in showing what occurs when a great corporation goes downhill. The story Lowenthal tells is that of the greatest receivership in American history, and his point is phrased in the title. It is the account of the reorgan-

ization of the Chicago, Milwaukee A* St. Paul railroad, which heretofore has been told only in piecemeal in senate documents, interstate commerce commission reports, and court decisions. It explains what happens to the value of those nicely-engraved certificates of stock, and the decorative papers called bonds when the property they represent goes into receivership guided by the great financial houses. Lowenthal explains the guiding influence of the banks, chief of which in this case was Kuhn. Loeb, which is to be investigated by the senate committee as soon as the Morgan inquiry is ended. When time came for bidding on the St. Paul there was some talk. Lowenthal says, that the House of Morgan would contest against Kuhn, Loeb. But an informal and unofficial statement wa s issued indicating it would not bid because that would "not be fair” to Kuhn. Loeb. “Published records,” Lowenthal says, “indicate a tendency on the part of important banking organizations to be considerate of each other.”

PAGE 9

MIDGET PHOTO NO HORROR TO J. P. MORGAN Financial King Enjoyed Chat With Tiny Woman; Held Not Blow to Dignity. WASHINGTON. June 6—The affair between Morgan and the midget has become quite a mix-up, and it ought to be straightened out. The facts are that Morgan enjoyed it. Indeed, he could have stopped the thing if he had wanted to. The little lady spent a few minutes talking with George Whitney. young partner, before she got near Morgan. Had he been “horrified,” as some reporters have it. he could have asked any one of two or three men standing between him and Whitney to escort the circus creature from the chamber.