Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 206, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1934 — Page 3
JAN. fi, 1934.
VICTIM’S PLEA FAILS TO SAVE BLACKMAILER William H. Coleman Weeps Asking Freedom for Threat Writer. Weeping openly as he testified in criminal court yesterday, William H Coleman, wealthy philanthropist and donor of the Coleman hospital, pleaded in vain for the freedom of a man who hrd tried to blackmail him last October. "I have no wish to prosecute this unfortunate man,” Mr. Coleman told Judge Frank P Baker, “I believe he attempted to blackmail me because his nerves were frayed in a futile search for a job." While the kindly philanthropist pleaded for him. the prisoner, Walter Dillman, who had pleaded guilty, wrung his hands in anguish and finally burst into loud sobs. He was arrested shortly after he had been charged with writing threatening letters to Mr. Coleman, Blaine H. Miller, 3433 Washington boulevard, president of the Excelsior Laundry Company and Ward Hackleman, insurance man. of 1314 West Thirty-sixth street, last fall. Mr. Hackleman was not in court, but Mr. Miller joined Mr. Coleman in a plea to the court to liberate the alleged blackmailer. Commending Mr. Coleman and Mr. Miller on their kindly attitude, Judge Baker explained that it would be necessary to send Dillman to the Indiana state prison for a term of one to five years. "If I set this man free, I would be encouraging others,” Judge Baker said in explaining his sentence. He added that he would file a recommendation for the prisoner’s release at the end of one year, providing that his conduct in prison warrants such a recommendation. As Dillman, his shoulders bowed with grief, was being led from the courtroom, Mr. Coleman, still visibly affected, shook the prisoner's hand and patted the heads of Dillman's children, who. with their mother, joined the prisoner just outside the courtroom. ENGLAND CONSTRUCTS TWO GIANT AIR LINES New Planes to Have Three Cabins, Including Smokeroom. By I nitrd Press LONDON, Jan. 6.—Two giant British air liners now being built will have three cabins, including a smokeroom. The machines are under construction at the well-known Short works at Rochester, Kent, for the Imperial Airways and will go into service early in 1934 on the LondonParis route. Thirty-nine passengers will be accommodated in the three cabins—twelve in the forward cabin, which will be the smokeroom, twelve in the center cabin, and fifteen in the after salon. Three entrance doors will provide access to the interior of the planes. One door for the pilots will be near the nose of the fuselage, one just aft of the forward cabin, and the third aft of , the rear salon. Normal cruising speed, with the airplane fully laden to over fourteen tons, will be around 108 miles an hour, while maximum range with reduced passenger and cargo load will be about seven hundred miles. Four motors with four-bladed airscrews will provide the power. WAR COST GERMANY 13,000.000_ CITIZENS Heaviest Casualties Claimed by Food Blockade. By l'nitrd Press BERLIN, Jan. 6.—Germany lost 13,000.000 citizens, due to the war and the treaty of Versailles. These figures show that Germany's losses were: 2.000.000 killed at the front in the war. 3.000.000 to 4.000.000 died of hunger, due to the food blockade. 3,000.000 to 3.501.000 were lost by the decreased birth rate. 6.500.000 German 1 icsi their citizenship and became Polish, or French, or other subjects by the Tr°aty of Versailles. ROCK KILLS BROWN BEAR Californians Run Out of Rifle Ammunition. B]t Unitrd Press KERNVILLE. Cal.. Jan. 6.—Earl Pascoe end George McComas, whether they rope ’em or shoot 'em, always bring back their bears. A few weeks ago they made the headlines of newspapers by bringing in one of the largest brown bears 'ever seen in this district. The other day they brought in a smaller bear, but a bigger story. They went hunting bears with but three cartridges between them. Their first shot at a 250-pound brown bear missed. The two other shots merely annoyed the creature, which promptly attacked Pascoe as he sat his horse. Pascoe. in wild west style, tossed his lanat around the bear's body and then maneuvering his horse, succeeded in tying up the bruin so McComas could kill it with a rock.
Prison Walls, Love, and Rum Ruined Dillinger, Aging Father Asserts
BY TRISTRAM COFFIN Times Staff Writer ■JV ,€OORESVILLE. Jan. 6.—As -*■*-*• police knoced vigorously at the white farmhouse door, stocky John Dillinger. paroled from the Indiana state prison only a few weeks before, hid in the barn. A crime had been committed in Indianapolis that night and police clamoring for an arrest, visited the rambling farmhouse near Mooresville where Dillinger was living with his family. His father. John Sr., a kindly old man of 70. soft-eyed and toilmarked. found John cowering in the darkness of the barn with a gun in his hand. “Put that gun away, son,” the father entreated. "You were home when the crime occurred. Give yourself up to the police.” John left that night never to return until after his sensational flight from a small Lima (O.) jail, in which a sheriff was slain. Then,
STORY OF JOHN DILLINGER'S BOYHOOD IS TOLD BY THESE PHOTOS
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Fishing the Air
‘Because." by D’Hardelot. will be featured bv Tito Guizar. Mexican tenor, to the accompaniment of his own guitar, over WABC-Colunibia network Saturday from 6:15 to 6:30 p. m. Equipped with a pack transmitter, an NBC announcer will describe the New York 1931 Automobile Show from the floor at the Grand Central Palace over WTAM and an NBC network Saturday at 7 p. m. Trade and Mark, those bewhiskered veteran songsters of the airwaves, who. unmasked. are Billy Hillpot and Scrappy Lambert, will be presented in the first of anew weekly series over WFBM and the CoHimbia network. Saturday from 7:45 to 8 p. m. HIGH SPOTS OF SATURDAY NIGHT'S PROGRAMS 6:3o—Columbia—Georgie Jessel. NBC (WJZ) —F. O. B. Detroit. 7:OO—NBC (WEAF)—New York 1934 Auto Show. B:oo—Columbia—Philadelphia orchestra. director Stokowski. NBC (WJZ)—Jamboree. B:ls—Columbia—Stoopnagle and Budd: Renard’s orchestra. B:3o—Columbia—Carborundum band. 9:OO—NBC iWEAF) —B. A. Rolfe’s orchestra. Columbia—Byrd Antarctic Exposition program. 10:00—NBC (WJZ)—WLS barn dance. 10:30 —NBC (WEAF) —Hollywood on the Air. The Philadelphia Studio orchestra will plav two selections from the music of Humperdinck's opera. Hansel and Gretel." in the nightly concert over WFBM and the Columbia network from 8 to 8:15 p. m. Saturday. Nonsense by Stoepnagle and Budd, songs by Vera Van of the "blue velvet” voire, and dance melodies bv Jacques Renard's ensemble will be heard during the program over WFBM and the Columbia network Saturday from 8:15 to 8:30 p. m. A medlev of favorite Southern tunes, including Oh Suzarmah" and Old Folks at Home" by Foster, the spiritual "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen.” Burleigh's arrangement of "Deep River' and Dixie" will be presented as a feature of the FOB Detroit program over WKBF and an NBC network Saturday at 9:30 p. m. SENTENCED FOR INSULT Frenchman Calls Town Mayor “Signature Machine." LA ROCHELLE, France. Jan. 6. Gaston Bernard, 44. farmer, was sentenced by the court to pay sixteen francs for having called his mayor “a signature machine." Sentence was suspended pending good behavior.
1 flying through, he stayed only for a few bitter words against society that he felt had wronged him. Now a dread legend follows him as federal public enemy No. 1, leader of the Indiana terror mob. a a a A REVIEW of young Dillinger’s ±\. early life shows no evidence of the criminal life he was to lead, except an occasional mischievious- : ness, before he went to prison. His father, a respected citizen of this small town, even now can not assemble the whole picture of his sons life. Four factors, he 1 claims, led to the criminal makeup. When John Jr. was only 3 years old his mother died, leaving him in the care of a sister. Audrey, i ten years older. With no children near his age. he was a lonely, spirited boy. The second factor is a hitherto unknown chronicle of his life. When he was 17, the age of sensitive adolescence, he fell deeply in love with a girl. Her parents
Upper—the old grocery, operated by John Dillinger Sr. in Indianapolis, while John was a small boy. John Jr. is seated in the wagon. Center, right—Young Dillinger is the lad right in the second row. The other children are members of his family. Center, left—The Dillinger family at one of their
Tonight’s Radio Excursion
SATURDAY P. M. 4:oo—Duchin’s orchestra (CBS) WABC. Piano duo (NBC) WJZ. 4:ls—Babe's in Hollywood (NBC) WJZ 4:30 —Three Scamps (NBC) WEAF. Jack Armstrong (CBS) WABC Neil Sisters (NBCi WJZ. 4:4s—Songs (NBC) WEAF. Reis and Dunn (CBSI WABC. s:oo—Meet the Artist (CBS) WABC. Trio (NBC) WJZ. Cugat s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. s:ls—Mildred Bailey (CBSi WABC. OLeary’s Irish Minstrels (NBC) WJZ. s:3o—George Hall's orchestra (CBS) WABC. Mary Small, soloist (NBC) WJZ. Jack Armstrong (CBS) WBBM. Himber's orchestra (NBCi WEAF. s:4s—Captain A1 Williams (NBC) WJZ. J. C. Nugent; male quartet (NBC) WEAF. Scherhan's ensemble (CBS) WABC. 6:oo—Frederick Wm. Wile (CBS) WABC. John Herrick. baritone (NBC). WJZ. 6:ls—Tito Guizar. tenor (CBS). WABC. Sketch (NBC) WJZ. _ Religion in the news (NBC) WEAF. 6:3o—George Jessel. quartet. Rich’s orchestra (CBS) WABC. Circus days (NBCi WEAF. Duchin’s orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 7:oo—Feature (CBS) WABC. Economics in the New Deal (NBCI WJZ. Opening of New York radio show i NBC) WEAF. 7:3o—Orchestra and soloist (NBC) WEAF. Boston symphony (NBCi WJZ. B:oo—Stokowski and Philadelphia orchestra (CBS) WABC. Feature announced (NBC) WEAF. 8:15—Colonel Stoopnagle and Budd (CBS) WABC. 8 30—Edward d'Anna concert band (CBS) WABC. 9 00—Rolfe Saturday night dancing gartv (NBCi WEAF. yrd Expedition broadcast (CBS) WABC. 9:3o—News service (CBS) WABC. Benny Kite and orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 9:45—H V. Kaltenborn (CBS) WABC. 10:00—One Man's Family iNBC) WEAF. Glen Gray orchestra (CBS) WABC. Barn dance (NBC) WJZ, WLS. 10:30 —Abe Lvman orchestra (CBSi WABC. Hollywood on the Air (NBC) WEAF. 11:00 —Jack Little and orchestra (CBS) WABC. Martin's orchestra (NBC) WJZ. Carefree carnival (NBC'i WEAF. 11:30 —Arnheim's orchestra (CBS)) WABC. Scotti's orchestra (NBC) WJZ. WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Company) SATURDAY P. M. s:3o—Marimba band. 5 45—Russian Gypsy orchestra (CBS). 6:oo—Frederick William Wile (CBS'. 6:15 —Pirate Club. 6:3o—George Jessel (CBS). 7:oo—Fireside singers. 7:15 —Bohemians. 7:4s—Trade and Mark ICBS). B:oo—Philadelphia Symphony (CBS). 8:15—Colonel and Budd (CBS). B:3o—Ramblers. 9:oo—Byrd Antarctic Expedition (CBS). 9:3o—News (CBS). 9:4s—Honolulu Serenaders. 10:00 —Casa Loma orchestra (CBS). 10:30—Louie Lowe orchestra. 10:45—Tally-ho orchestra. 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 11*30—Gus Arnheim orchestra (CBS). 12:00—Tally-ho orchestra. A. M. 12:15 —Sign off. SUNDAY A. M B:oo—Junior Bugle (CBS). 9:oo—Jake's entertainers. 9:3o—Christian Men Builders. 10:30 to 12:00—Silent. 12:00 iNoon) —Church of the Air (CBS). P M. 1:30—Hollywood Show (CBSI. 2:oo—Philharmonic Symphony concert (CBS' 4:oo—Wheeler Mission program. 4 30—Bakers (CBS'. s.oo—Songs of My Mother (CBS'. s.3o—Second Presbyterian church. 6:oo—Ace Brieode orchestra (CBS). 6:ls—Jordan Conservatory program. 6:3O—H V, Kaltenborn (CBS). 6:45 Rm-Tin-Tm (CBS'. 7:oo—New York Visits the Auto Show iCBS). 8 00—Seven-Star revue (CBS). 9 00—Salon orchestra. 9 30—Piano Twins. 9:45 —Message from Governor McNutt. 10 00—Little Jack Little orchestra (CBS). 10 30—Leon Belasco orchestra (CBS). 11:00—Atop the Indiana Roof. 11.30—Louie Lowe orchestra. 12:00 Midnight—Tallv-ho orchestra. A M 12:15—Sign oft.
tore the two apart, leaving Dillinger broken and embittered. Later he married. The marriage, never satisfactory, ended in a divorce when Dillinger was sent to the Indiana reformatory at 21. The third was when Dillinger, drinking with a man ten years his senior, Ed Singleton, robbed and beat an aged grocer. The elder Dillinger, unlearned in the way of law or the courts, instructed his son to plead guilty. John Sr. blames the judge for giving his son the maximum sentence of ten years. His accomplice, turning state’s evidence, was given eight years. The story is whispered around Mooresville now that Singleton lives in dread for fear that Dillinger may return to avenge. a s a THE fourth was while he was in the reformatory he was transferred to Michigan City, presumably for misconduct. The hatred of society rancored in his breast, and at the state prison he
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
many outings when John Jr. was a boy. Second from the right, he is seated next to the older sister, who took over the duty of mother to him. Lower—Dillinger posed boyishly, the husky smiling kid that his friends knew before his terror reign in the underworld.
WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Inc.) SATURDAY P. M. 4:oo—Ward and Muzzy. 4:ls—Babes in Hollywood. 4:3o—News Flashes. 4:4s—Arlene Jackson (WEAF). 5:00—A1 Pierce and gang. s:ls—O'Leary's Irish Minstrels (WJZ). s:3o—Mary Small (WJZ). s:4s—Little Orphan Annie (WJZ). 6:oo—Piqno melodies. 6:ls—Religion news (WEAF). 6:3o—Circus Days (WEAF). 6:45 —Jack and Loretta Clemons (WEAF). 7:oo—Economics in the New Deal (WJZ). 7:30—T0 be announced. 8:00 —Hoosier Shindig. 9:oo—Master singers. 10:00—One Mans Family (WEAF). 10:30—Jack Wright's orchestra. 11:00—Carefree Carnival (WEAF). 12:00 (Midnight)—Sign off. SUNDAY A. M 8:ou —Children’s hour (WJZ). 9:00—Tne Radio Pulpit (WEAF). 9:30—101 Mens Bible Class. 10:00 —Morning Musicale (WJZ). 10:30—Crystal Melodies. 11:30—Radio City concert (WJZ). p - M--12:30—American melodies. I:oo—Willard singers. I:3o—Watchtower. 2;oo—Wayne King orchestra (WEAF). 2:30 —Jan Garber orchestra (WJZ). 3:oo—Submarine G-10 (WEAF). 3:ls—Cadle Tabernacle. 4:ls—Vesper hymns. 4:30 —Grand Hotel (WJZ). s:oo—Catholic hour (WEAF). s:3o—Our American schools (WEAF). 6:oo—Marshall players. B:ls—Organ Sympnonettes (WEAF). 6:30 —Lucille Manners (WEAF). 6:4s—Wendell Hail (WEAF). 7:00 —N. B. C. Symphony (WJZ). B:oo—Cadle Tabernacle evening service. 9;oo—Jack Benny (WEAF). 9:30 —Hall oi Fame (WEAF). 10:00—To be announced. 10:15—Frances Langford (WEAF). 10:30— Minneapolis symphony concert (WEAF). 11:30—Congress Hotel (WEAF). 12:00 (Midnight)—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati SATURDAY P M. 4:oo—Jimmy Garrigan and orchestra (NBCi. 4:3o—Parent-Teacher Forum. 4:45 —Little Orphan Annie (NBC). 5:00 —Jack Armstrong. 5:15 —Joe Emerson and orchestra. 5:30—80b Newhall. „ s:4s—University of Cincinnati talk. 6:OO—R. F D. hour. 6:3o—Circus Days (NBC). 6:4s—Transmitter talk. 7:00 —To be announced. B:oo—Jack Pearl and A1 Goodman orchestras (NBC). 8:30 —Castle Farm orchestra. B:4s—over the Rhine German band. 9:00 —Saturday Night Dancing Party (NBC). 10:00—Barn dance (NBC). 11:00 —Grey stone Dimmick's Sunnybrook orchestra. 11:30—Sign off. SUNDAY A. M. , . . _ 7:oo—Melody soloist; Grande trio (NBC). 7:3o—Church Forum. B:oo—Children's hour. 9:oo—Southland sketches (NBC). 9:30 Mexican Marimba Typica orchestra (NBC). 10:00—Morning musicale. string quartet; guest artist (NBC). 10;45 —Donhail trio and the Phantom Strings (NBC). 11:00—Program chat. 11:05—Arthur Chandler Jr., organist. 11:30—Radio City concert (NBCi. P. M 12:30—Alfred Schehl, organist. 12:45—College of Music recital. I:oo—Gene Arnold and the Commodores (NBC). I:3o—Dr. Jacob Tarshish. 2:oo—Ladv Esther Wayne King orchestra (NBCI. 2:3o—Jan Garber's orchestra (NBC). 3:oo—Croslev theater of the air. 3:3o—The Hoover Sentinels Edward Davies, baritone; chorus; Josef Koestner’s orchestra. 4:00 —Smilin' Ed McConnell. . 4:3o—Little Church in the Hills. s:oo—Symphony orchestra. 6:oo—Ted Weems dance orchestra (NBC). 6:3o—Joe Penner, Harriet Hilliard and Ozzie Nelson's orchestra. 7:oo—Eddie Cantor and Rubinoff's orchestra (NBC). 8:00—Will Rogers, Revellers quartet and A1 Goodman's orchestra (NBC). B:3o—Walter Winchell 'NBC'. B:4s—Unbroken Melodies.
was associated with hardened criminals, who fired his hate and tempted his criminal ambition. Only a few hours after his stepmother had died, John returned to the farm with his father. His father noticed a subtle change in the boy, not apparent on the outside, but burning furiously within. John helped his father with the com, went hunting with him, but always there was a restlessness stirring him. He made frequent trips to Indianapolis, where it is suspected he leagued with his outlaw confederates. His pictures as a boy show what neighbors, friends and even stolid merchants of Mooresville have claimed that he was a normal bov of a middleclass family. Ho lived as a boy at 2053 Cooper street in Indanapolis, while his father operated a small grocery. His one interest apparently was in mechanics. He worked for James Burcham as a mechanic in a shop on Kentucky avenue, where he apparently was coQjented. Even
9:00 —Jack Benny and Frank Black’s orchestra. 9:3o—Hall of Fame—Lehn and Fink (N). 10:00—Dimmick's Sunnybrook orchestra. 10:30—Minneapolis Symphony orchestra. 11:30—Sign off. ALBERT W.LEVI, MERCHANT, DIES Founder of Retail Clothing Group to Be Buried Sunday at Peru. Following an illness of eighteen months, Albert W. Levi, 64, of 1 East Thirty-sixth street, died in his home yesterday. A well-known clothing merchant, he formerly was associated with the Industrial Center. Last rites will be held Sunday at 10 in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Peru, his birthplace. Mr. Levi was founder and secretary of the Indiana Retail’s Men’s Clothing Association and founder and president of the Indianapolis Men’s Apparel Club. He was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation, the Peru, (Ind.) Masonic lodge and the Scottish Rite at Rochester, N. Y. Mr. Levi is survived by his widow, his son, Albert W. Levi Jr., four sisters, Mrs. Saul Munter, all of Indianapolis; Miss Lulu Levj, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Nellie Weiler, Cleveland, and Mrs. Morris Higer, Detroit, and a brother, Ed J. Levi Wilmette, 111.
HELD OVER
* 1 J&S imsm MA
Wallace Beery So much business was done by “Dinner at Eight" at Loew's Palace this last week that the management has held it over for a second week, starting today. Os course, Wallace Beery, as Dan Packard, is still in the cast.
after the family moved to Mooresville, John drove back and forth to work. People of Mooresville steadyfastly claim that he was a “goodhearted boy, nothing unusual about him.” A merchant who signed his parole told the writer, "I believed I was right in signing that parole. We all thought he had a "raw deal.” The old grocer, whom John had attacked, signed the parole request. a b a Today, as one steps into the humble Dillinger farmhouse, a motto over the door proclaims, “Be Kind to Each Other.” Children. John’s stepsisters, scamper about the house. There is a spirit of naive faith in his son behind John Sr., who plaintively can not grasp the significance of his son’s actions. Other children have been honor students at school. A visitor is caught with the same spirit, the perplexing question, “What are the reasons for John’s behavior?” Once police stampeded to the
PWA EXPECTS TO MAKE JOBS FOR MILLIONS Aid Authorized to Finance 10.000 Public Works Projects. By United Press WASHINGTON, Jan. s.—Public works dollars, distributed in cities and hamlets throughout the nation under the recovery program, are expected to create employment for millions during 1934. As the new year approaches, the ! federal Public Works Administra- : tion has alloted nearly all of the $3,300,000,000 voted by congress in June for the two-year emergency program of public works. Approximately 5,000,000 workers | now are busy on a diversification of | federal and non-federal projects. Another army of men now unemployment is assured of wages ! throughout the coming year. Will Seek More Funds The PWA is confident that it will reach its major objective—reemployment of millions of men, j with consequent restoration of purchasing power. Heavy-set, fatherly Harold L. j Ickes, who. as interior secretary, was named custodian of the big public j works fund, has carried on his work | expeditiously in order to safeguard j the taxpayers’ money. In six months ! he has accomplished much to stim- | ulate industrial activity. Administrator Ickes has indicated he will recommend an additional J PWA appropriation by the coming ; congress. The amount to be asked I has not been mentioned, but observ- j ers predicted it would approximate $1,500,000,000.' Loans and grants have been authorized by the PWA to aid in financing about 10,000 public works projects. Recent reports revealed a marked increase in the number of j construction contracts. 5600,000,000 Involved According to latest compilations, ! contracts made and work already under way on federal projects alone involve expenditures totaling over $600,000,000. As 1933 neared an end, PWA had made allotments amounting to more than $650,000,000 for non-federal projects. Large allotments for federal undertakings included $400,<100.000 for ; federal aid highways in every state, j $50,000,000 for roads in the public ! domain, and $238,000,000 for naval construction. Virtually every execu- ! tive department and independent establishment of the federal government received allotments for projects designed to move men quickly | from relief rolls to pay rolls. Up to Dec. 15, allotments amounting to more than $60,000,000 had ! been made for federal builders j throughout the country under the 1 PWA’s policy of substituting utility j for magnificence. River and harbor and flood control projects have shared major portions of the public works fund. War Department Busy The war department is carrying on a comprehensive river and harbor and flood control program with PWA funds. Allotments for flood control work on the lower Mississippi river alone amount to $44,120,000. Army engineers also received $74,945,700 for general river and harbor work; $33,500,000 for ; | the upper Mississippi river, $17,- | 753,108 for the Missouri river, $20,250,000 for the Bonneville dam on the Columbia river in Oregon, and $25,000,000 for the Ft. Peck dam and reservoir in eastern Montana. Municipal and sewer projects in scores of municipalities have been j approved in the nonfederal cate- j gory. PWA had made allotments for more than 1,100 nonfederal projects up to Dec. 15.
5.000,000 Re-Employed Approximately $50,000,000 has been allotted for low-cost housing and slum clearance projects for a i score of cities in a dozen states. In addition to this, $100,000,000 was turned over to the Public ; Works Emergency Housing Corporation, which was created by PWA to facilitate and expedite housing and slum clearance projects. PWA has been financing from its j fund the national recovery admin- ! istration, civilian conservation ; corps, civil works administration, ; and other national emergency organizations. It was officially reported that the total number of j, men re-employed by all agencies ’ financed by PWA funds is past the 5,000,000 mark. CALCIUM IS USED TO INDUCE GOOD SLEEP Chemical Found Best Insurance by Psychologist. By United Press SYRACUSE, N. Y„ Jan. 6.—Dr. Donald A. Laird, director of experimental psychology at Colgate university, has discovered that calcium eaten with meals during the day time induces more restful sleep at night, he claims. His discoveries were announced after prolonged experiments cn eight “healthy" students.
farm. They abruptly asked John Sr., “What would you do if your son came here to stay?” Mr. Dillinger confesses the questioned disturbed his conscience. His respect for law and order was caught off balance. He replied, thinking of his son as a hunted fugitive, “What would you do if you were a father?” John Sr. does not condone his son's crime career, but there lingers, in his mind a hope, rather than a conviction, that John was not guilty of all the crimes of which he has been suspected. He has a warrant of faith, a letter penciled by John when jailed at Lima, signed “Johnnie.” In that letter the man brandod now as an arch-criminal said that he was “not guilty of everything.” John Sr. waits now, shaken, for a radio flash that his son has been killed in a gun duel. The rest of the country waits, too, but in a different spirit. A father’s love confuses all values!
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BABIES AND CHILDREN □ Care of the Baby □ Child Health □ Children’s Manners □ Food for Children □ Infant Care in Summer □ School Lunches □ Sex Education □ Training the Child BIOGRAPHIES □ Admiral Richard E. Byrd □ Detectives of Fiction □ Directory of Movie Stars □ Famous Bandits □ Famous Detectives □ Famous Pioneers □ Famous Pirates □ Famous Spies □ Five Great Presidents □ Popular Screen Men □ Popular Screen Women □ Presidents of the U. S. □ Pres. Wives and Families □ Radio and Picture Stars □ Roosevelt and Garner BIRDS AND ANIMALS □ Bird House Building □ Canaries, Care of □ Cats, Care of □ Dogs, Care of □ Goldfish □ Guinea Pigs □ Homing Pigeons □ Poultry Raising □ Rabbit Raising □ Snakes. Species, Habits EDUCATION □ Bible Facts □ British Parliament □ Choosing a Career □ Club Woman's Manual □ Com. Errors in English □ Debater's Manual □ Dictionary of Slang □ Letter Writer's Guide □ Limitation of Armaments □ Nicknames and Phrases □ Parliamentary Law □ Prohibition, Pro and Con □ Religion of the World □ Stage and Screen Writing □ Technocracy □ Wildfiowers □ Wonders of Nature □ Writing for Magazines ETIQUETTTE □ Dress Etiquette □ Engagement Etiquette □ Etiquette for Dinners □ Social Etiquette □ Travel Etiquette □ Wedding Etiquette FINANCE AND MONEY □ Banking System of U. S. □ Gold and Silver Money □ History U. S. Coin Designs □ Home Financing □ Home Mortgage Refinancing □ Home Ownership □ Money of U. S. □ Scrip and Barter □ Stock Market □ Value of Old Coins FOODS AND COOKERY □ Apples and Apple Dishes □ Around U. S. Cookbook □ Bread Making, Quick □ Bread Making, Yeast □ Cakes and Cookies □ Calorie Values of Foods □ Candied Fruits and Nuts □ Care of Food in Home □ Chafing Dish Recipes □ Cheese and Cheese Dishes □ Cooking for Two □ Dainty Delicacies □ Desserts of All Kinds □ Doughnuts and Crullers □ Drinks. Homemade □ Economy Recipes □ Egg Dishes □ Fish and Seafood Cookery □ Fondants, Fudges, Bonbons □ Foreign Dishes □ Frozen Desserts □ Fruit Dishes □ Good Proportions in Diet □ Hard Candies and Taffies □ Honey as a Food □ Learning to Cook □ Low Cost Meals □ Leftovers, How to Use □ Meats, How to Cook □ Menus for Fifty Days □ Picnic Lunches □ Pies and Fancy Pastries □ Potatoes and Substitutes □ Poultry and Game □ Quantity Cooking □ Refrigerator Delicacies □ Rice Dishes □ Salads and Dressings □ Sandwiches, Sixty Kinds □ Sauces, Desserts and Meat □ Soups, 25 Tested Recipes □ Tea Cakes and Party Pastries □ Vegetables, How to Cook GAMES AND PARTIES □ Backgammon, Rules of □ Bridge Parties □ Card Games, 500, 21, etc. □ Children's Parties □ Contract Bridge □ Games, Indoor □ Games, Outdoor □ Halloween □ Holiday Entertaining □ How to Dance □ Initiation Stunts □ Old Fashioned Dances □ Parties of Ail Kinds □ Party Menus, Prizes, Favors □ St. Patrick's Parties □ Tennis, Rules of □ Unique Show'er Parties □ Valentine Parties □ Wedding Anniversaries GARDENS □ Beautifying Home Grounds □ Chrysanthemums □ Dahlias, Home Grown □ Flower Gardens □ Gardening
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□ House Plants □ Lawns. Care of □ Rose Gardens □ Shrubbery and Hedges □ Sundials. How to Build GOVERNMENT □ Congress of the U. S. □ Cost of Gov't, in U. S. □ Foreign Gov’t Debts to U. S. □ Judicial System of U. S. □ Presidency □ Presidcxit s Cabinets □ Relief and Recovery Laws □ Seeing Washington □ Taxation in the U S. □ The New Deal □ The White House HEALTH AND BEAUTY □ Care of the Feet □ Care of the Hair □ Care of the Skin □ Care of the Teeth □ First Aid to Vacationists □ Health Building Exercises □ Increasing Your Weight □ Keeping Youth and Beauty □ Marriage and Happiness □ Perfumes and Cosmetics □ Personality and Charm □ Prenatal Care □ Reducing Parts of the Body □ Reducing Your Weight □ Successful Marriage □ Swimming HISTORY □ Amer. Airmen in World War □ American Depressions □ American Wars □ Christmas Customs □ Constitution, History, U. S. □ Countries of Europe □ Famous Assassinations □ Famous Buildings □ Famous Naval Vessels □ Flag, History of □ Genealogy □ Given Names, Meaning □ Historic Phrases □ History of Marriage □ History of Prohibition □ How the U. S. Grew □ Marine Disasters □ Names, Indian □ National Anthems □ Navy in World War □ Origins of Etiquette □ Political Parties in U. S. □ Pres. Elections Since 1789 □ Presidential Inaugurations □ States of the Union □ Surnames □ Votes of States Since 1896 □ World War, Part 1 □ World War. Part 2 HOME ECONOMICS □ Auto Painting □ Automobile Camping □ Care of the Family Auto □ Care of Clothing □ Earning Extra Money □ Embroidery Stitches □ Floors, Care of □ Furniture, Refinish and Care □ Home Conveniences □ Household Budgets □ Household Hints □ Household Measurements □ Home Laundering □ Interior Decorating □ Investment Advice □ Lampshades, How to Make □ Painting Around the Home □ Plumbing Repairs at Home □ Polishes of All Kinds □ Safety for the Household □ Stairs, Removal of □ Waterproofing Cellars □ Whitewash LAWS □ Citizenship and Naturalization □ Copyrights and Trademarks □ Game Law's of the States □ Fishing Laws □ Immigration Laws □ Income Tax Laws □ Marriage Laws of the States □ Motor Law's of the States □ Patents, How to Obtain □ Veterans Relief Laws MYTHS, PUZZLES, HOROSCOPES AND OCCULTISM □ Astrological Horoscopes □ Dreams, Meanings of □ Fact and Fancy □ Flowers, Meanings of □ Fortune Telling by Cards □ Gems and Precious Stones □ Graphology □ Mathematical Puzzles □ Mythology □ Numerology □ Palmistry □ Puzzling Scientic Facts □ Spiritualism □ Superstitions and Delusions PESTS □ Ants, Exterminating □ Bedbugs □ Cockroaches □ Household Pests, All Kinds □ Moths and Their Control □ Rats, Exterminating □ Termites or White Ants SCIENCE AND AVIATION □ Airships □ Amateur Photography □ Astronomy, Popular □ Batteries □ Electricity □ Evolutions, Pro and Con □ Gliders □ Great Inventions □ How to Become an Aviator □ Largest and Smallest Things □ Psycholoanalysis Simplified □ Radio Development □ Seven Wonders □ Story of the Zeppelins □ Story of Motion Pictures n Weather and Climate
