Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1934 — Page 1

1* p^t/FP^^OVVAJ*P

2 SAW HINGES ON CELL, FLEE FROM BLOOMINGTON JAIL Paragon Prisoner, Held on Habitual Criminal Charge, Escapes for Second Time Within Two Months. ACTUAL TIME OF BREAK UNKNOWN Pair Gains Freedom From Second Floor Room; Both Seen in Lockup After Midnight, Sheriff Says. By United Press ... - BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sppt. 17.—Sawing hinges from a second-floor cell door, two men escaped from the Monroe county jail here last night. They were Roy Weaver, 31, Paragon, and Riley Shipley, 30, Monroe county. The escape was discovered by Sheriff J. Lester Bender

when Weaver and Shipley! failed to answer the call to breakfast. It was the second break from the ! local Jail within two months, j Weaver and Marvin Roach. 27, In- ; dianapolis, escaped July 30 by sluggins a turnkey. Weaver was recaptured at Indianapolis a short time later, but Roach still is at large. Actual time of the break last night, rould not be determined immediately. but the sheriff said the men both were in their cells shortly after midnight. Weaver was being held as an habitual criminal and was charged with robbing general stores at Ellettsville and Gosport, Shipley was j being held on charges ot criminal assault and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. City and county authorities and state police from the barracks at ; Bedford began an immediate search lor the fugitives. Unequal Terms Scored B> > Hitt A Press HOUSTON. Tex.. Sept. 17.—The inequalities of prison sentences are the chief cause of penitentiary' riots, E R Cass, secretary of the American Prison Association, charged to- j day. Juries that don't know what it is all about and judges who have a penchant for "socking" the un-, fortunate arc responsible for a condition that some day will result in the adoption of some system where- ' by boards of honorable, honest men will pass sentence. Casa said. "Two prisoners, both charged with the same offense, meet in prison and one learns he got a much longer sentence than his cellmate. He is convinced he didn't get justice and becomes recalcitrant. From such things prison riots start." Cass was one of the speakers at the annual convention of the American Prison Association which opened a five-day session today. METHODIST PARLEY TO ASSIGN PASTORS City Ministers Named on Evansville College Board. Bh United Press COLUMBUS. Ind. Sept. 17—Assignment of pastors for the next year today was to conclude the annual seven-day Indiana conference of the Methodist Episcopal church here. Trustees of the Evansville college were elected yesterday. They are Charles Ford. New Harmony; the Rev. O. W r . Fifer, Cincinnati: Dr. John W. Walker. Bloomington; V. i O. Noblitt. Columbus: Bishop Edgar Blake. Detroit. Mich : the Rev H. A Keck. Evansville; the Rev. W. T. Jones. Indianapolis, the Rev. W W. Wiant. Indianapolis: the R?v. S. J. Cross. Seymour, and T. J. Morton. Evansville. RECORD RAINS FLOOD WASHINGTON DISTRICT Potomac River Tide* Endanger Shore Property. By U nitrA Pr, • WASHINGTON. Sept. 17. Streams overflowed their banks, highway traffic was interrupted and telephone service disrupted today as record-breaking September rainJ continued. Tides on the Potomac rose to the point where shore property was endangered. Seawalls protecting the Anacostia naval station were awash A 203-inch rainfall brought the month's total to 1332 inches more than an inch above the all time record for the whole month. MINOR POWERS ATTACK SOVIET LEAGUE ENTRY Bitter Attack on Admission of Russia Is Launched. Bp imtted Press GEVWva. Sept. 17.—The smaller powers began a bitter attack on So viet Russia's admission go the League of Nations at a meeting of the league's political commission today. Although the leading powers have voted to accept the Soviet Union as a member of the family of nations some of the others remained unreconciled to the idea, and denounced the tacit acceptance of Soviet ideals which a seat on the council would imply. Year motor checked. Carburetor adjusted. See Carburetor Sales, 214 East Ohio.—Adv.

The Indianapolis Times Fair and not quite so cool tonight; tomorrow cloudy with rising temperature.

NR A, wi do oua

VOLUME 46—NUMBER 110

CADDY SHOT IN ORCHARD RAID City Boy, 15, Critically Wounded; Caretaker Is Held. The boyish prank of plundering apples from an orchard may cost the life of Herschel Hinkley. 15-year-old caddy, who is in St. Vincent's hospital suffering from bullet wounds received yesterday. The boy with four other caddies from the Highland Golf and Country Club raided the orchard on the Stalnaker estate adjoining the club. The caretaker, George Myers, 33, R. R. 17. Box 86, surprised the youths and fired with a .22-caliber rifle. Young Hinkley fell to the ground, wounded in the side. His condition, described as critical yesterday, was reported better today at the hospital. Myers, who said he fired in the ai£. to. frighten the bovs, was arrested on charges of vlgrancy and shooting with intent to kill. Young Hinkley lives at 4053 Cornelius avenue. The caddies had been given permission by the owner of the estate to pick up fallen apples, according to Mrs. Janies H. Spencer, the boy’s grandmother, with whom he lived. Herschel is a junior at Manual training high school and used the funds obtained by caddying in the summer to finance his schooling, Mrs. Spencer said. WARMER WEATHER PROMISED TONIGHT Mercury Drops to Lowest Level Since May 27. Relief from the coolest weather since May 27 was promised here by the weather bureau forecast of rising temperatures for tonight and tomorrow. At 4:40 today the mercury sank to 47.5 degrees, a low level not recorded since May 27. The rain Saturday started the mercury on its downward trend. according to weather bureau officials. At 11:30 the temperature had risen to 66 degrees. SLEEPING SICKNESS DEATH TOLL MOUNTS 9 Muncie Woman. Evansville Man Are Latest Victims. | By United Press MUNCIE. Ind.. Sept. 17.—The death of Mrs. Margaret E. Shideler, 75. after an illness of two days, resulted from sleeping sickness, physicians said today. She was the fourth victim of the malady in Mun- | cie. By United Press EVANSVILLE. Ind.. Sept. 17. Vanderburg county's sleeping sickness claimed its tenth victim today with the death of Newton R. Robinson. 53. Three Strikers Are Slain By United Press MANILA. P. 1.. Sept. 17.—Three striking cigarmakers were lulled and nine persons were wounded today in a not at the gates of the Minerva cigar factory.

Mystery Veils Killing of Hoosier Store Owner Lack of Motives in Slaying Near Anderson Handicaps Probe: S2O in Pockets Untouched. By United Press ANDERSON. Ind.. Sept 17—Lack of motive for the slaying of Alton B Custer. 65. proprietor of a general store at Orestes, shot at his farm home Saturday night, hampered investigations of Madison county author -

ittes today. • Sheriff Bernard Bradley admitted he was without clews. He said Custer. a prominent church worker, was not known to have any enemies. The shooting occurred late Saturday night when Custer returned to his home near Orestes arter closing his store. He staggered on to j

OUT TO SEE AMERICA FIRST—IN YACHT RACE

I I ■ •>

President Roosevelt was in holiday mood when he turned from cares of state to be a spectator at the America's cup races off Newport, R. 1., today. Ready to pull for the American entry against the British challenger, he is showm here at the rail of Vincent Astor’s yacht Nourmahal. With him, also keenly enjoying the voyage, are his grandchildren, Sistie and Buzzie Dali, and Astor.

Plane Firm Made More Than Million Per Cent on Investment, Senate Told

By United Press WASHINGTON. Sept. 17.—Stockholders of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Company realized a return of more than 1.000.000 per cent on their original SI,OOO investment in the firm, senate investigators were told today. The company was organized in July, 1925, with a stock issue of 5,000 shares priced at 20 cents a share. Investigators for the senate muni-, tions committee said that at the end of 1932 the return for the original investment was $11,437,250 or 1,142,725 per cent. It included cash dividends of $6,400,000 and stock dividends of $5,037,250. The amazing profit was revealed as the committee started its third and last week of the first phase of the inquiry into the munitions industry. Other developments of the morning session: 1. A South American agent of the United Aircraft Foreign Sales Cor-

YOUTH FACING CHAIR ESCAPES FROM JAIL Murderer Flees by Dozing County Jail Guard. By United Press SPRINGFIELD. Mass.. Sept. 17. While a guard dozed in a chair only eight feet away, Alexander Kaminski, 24-year-old New Britain (Conn.) youth facing the electric chair for murder, escaped from Hampden county jail today. More than nine hours later he was still at large as twenty-five state troopers and a small army of police armed with riot guns strove to recapture him dead or alive. Kaminski was to have been given a mandatory death sentence this week for clubbing to death a guard in a sensational escape from the same jail last October. Kaminski sawed the bars of his cell, got through two doors, apparently with the aid of keys, and was gone for sometime before his absence was discovered. EIGHT QUESTIONED IN $266 ROBBERY HERE Two Grocery Employes Kidnaped by Bandit Trio. With the arrest today of John Roth. 22, of 2123 West Minnesota street, on vagrancy charge, police today were holding eight men in an investigation into the robbery of $266 from two grocery employes, kidnaped by three armed bandits, while taking the day's receipts from their store to a bank. Roth, held in high bond, is said by police to have admitted furnishing one of the three guns used in the holdup. The $266 was taken from Otis Rogers, 36, of 720 Rochester street, manager of the Standard grocery at 2028 West Michigan street, and Harry Oliver, 552 North Lyons avenue, a clerk in the store, shortly after 9:30 Saturday night when their automobile was stopped by traffic at Michigan street and White river.

the porch of the home and called for help. Members of the family went to his aid, but he died after explaining, “someone shot me.” Custer was carrying a basket of rricc.l“f; and had nearly S2O in his pcoket when shot. Neither was molested, relatives said

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934

poration suggested adoption of the “commission" payment plan to get business. A company witness discried the proposal as “foolish.” 2. Evidence that the department of commerce in 1933 aided in establishing a flying school in Canton, China. Negotiations to set up this school were secret, it was brought out, because a “neighboring nation” might question propriety of the plan. One senator mentioned Japan in this connection. The original investors were C. W. Deeds, George J. Mead, Fred Rentschled and the Pratt & Whitney Company. Deeds told the committee the salaries and bonuses paid to him from 1926 to 1933 amounted to $293,789. Mead, he said, received $522,485 and Rentschler, from 1925, $1,5553,759. The story of Pratt & Whitney’s entrance into the aircraft engine building business was told by Donald L. Brown, director of the United Export Company. A letter from Assistant Secretary of Navy Henry L. Roosevelt to Chairman Gerald P. Nye (Rep., N. D. said the Pratt & Whitney engines were recommended to the department by Commander Eugene E. Wilson, their chief of the design division of the aeronautics bureau. On Jan. 18, 1930, Mr. Roosevelt wrote, Wilson resigned from the navy and accepted a position with SPORTS COLUMNIST'S FATHER DEAD AT 65 Edward Montgomery Williams Succumbs in Memphis. By United Press MEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept. 17.—Edward Montgomery Williams, 65, father of Joe Williams, New York City, sport:, columnist for ScrippsHoward newspapers, died at his | home here today. Williams, employed by the government here, had been ill more than a year. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Emmae Fleming Williams; five children. Joe; William TANARUS„ Houston, Tex.; Mrs. Frank Cratin. Mrs. Edward Doyle and Mrs. Jack Lewis, all of Memphis, and a sister, Mrs. Steve Mussic, Memphis. ANNIVERSARY HONORS CONSTITUTION SIGNING 30 National Organizations Join in Philadelphia Ceremony. By United Press PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 17.—Ceremonies commemorating the signing of the Constitution. 147 years ago, took place today in Constitution hall. Thirty national patriotic organizations participated. Justice Robert Von Moschzisker, formerly of Pennsylvania supreme court; Colonel Robert R. McCormick. publisher of the Chicago Tribune; National Commander Edward A. Hayes of the American Le- ; gion, and Bainbridge Colby, secre- | tary of state under the administra- j i tion Woodrow Wilson, were the main speakers. BANDIT SUSPECT ASKS JURY. SPECIAL JUDGE Melville Blanton, Two Pals Demand Separate Trials. The trial of Melville Blanton, alleged bandit and fugitive from Governors Island. New York military prison, and his two co-defendants, Charles Hamilton and Theodore Hulburt. was delayed in criminal court today as the three demanded separate jury trials and a special judge. The men are alleged to have been involved in holdups in many cities. They were arrested here for a minor traffic violation and later were charged with robbery and grand larceny. Hourly Temperatures 4:40 a. m.. 47.5 10 a. m 61 ; 6a. m 48 11 a. m 64 | 7a. m 50 12 (noon).. 65 Ba. m 54 Ip. m 67 : 8 a. m..... 60

the United Aircraft and Transport Corporation, of which Pratt & Whitney is a subsidiary. Investigators read letters from the files of the Black air mail investigating committee, showing the company's setup, including one from a workman for the Pratt & Whitney Company, w’hich charged that “pull” with government officials enabled the firm to make money. “I deny that,” Browm said angrily. Nye refused to withhold the document. Francis H. Love, head of the United Aircraft Foreign Sales Corporation, testified that the firm did not “sanction” payment of special commissions to certain individuals to obtain business abroad. Letters from Clark M. Carr, South American agent, to the home office calling attention to the necessity of adopting the commission payment plan were described by Love as “foolish.” “Carr w'as irrei ponsible.” Love said. “He w’as down there a year and a half and nev;r sold a plane.” SERGEANT ARRESTED ON FRAUD CHARGE First of Indicted Fifteen to Be Seized. (Early Details on Pape 3) Bernard Rome, 42. a regular army sergeant instructor for the Indiana national guard in Indianapolis, was arrested by a deputy United States marshal today to answer an indictment of entering false claims against the government. He is the first of fifteen guardsmen indicted by the federal grand jury Saturday to be arrested. Rome is alleged to have entered claims in excess of expenses allowed him by the government. PAT PAGE LOSER IN FEDERAL COURT FIGHT Damage Suit Is Decided in University’s Favor. The damage suit of Harlan O. (Pat) Page, former Indiana university football coach, against the university was decided in favor of the university in federal court today. Mr. Page had alleged the university broke its contract with him. BOUNCING - bTb'MNJURED Girl Catapulted From Bedroom Window by Bed Springs. Bruised and a little dazed, Helen Heidenreich. 4, of 3202 Roosevelt avenue, is in city hospital after a freak accident today. She w’as bouncing on the bedsprings in a bedroom on the second floor of her home when the springs broke and catapulted her out the window to the pavement twenty feet below’. She escaped with head bruises.

Testimony of Morro Castle’s Engineer Contradicted by Ship Passenger

By United Press NEW YORK. Sept. 17.—Slowly but doggedly a federal inquiry board today brought out important details of an unlocked blanket-filled writing room locker in which fire started aboard the S S. Mono Castle and in which the blaze gained such great headway that it spread rapidly through the ship immediately after its discovery. Most important, in the questioning of stewards and others on the burned luxury liner, was the effort of examiners to discover whether any unlawful cans of inflammable polish were hidden in the locker or whether it was possible for an arsonist to get into it. They found: 1. That the locker was unlocked when the ship was in Havana harbor and when Richard Kopf, a passenger, opened it, although he testified that “I had no business there. I was looking for something.” 2. There were several other persons nearby at the time, Kopf said, including a steward, named Ramos, apparently a Cuban, and a Havana

OPENS COURT ACTION IN ATTEMPT TO FREE PAIR HELD IN MURDER PROBE

HXTLEMLLS FAITOGfIEAK PICKET IKS Strike Stronger Than Ever, Leader Claims After Checkup. By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.—Efforts of textile manufacturers to open their mills today have proved a ‘‘complete failure," strike leaders declared after a checkup. "The strike is bigger than it was on Saturday," Francis J. Gorman, leader of the walkout, said. At the same time, he threatened that all allied textile trades would be called out if the strike w'as not settled this week. He said the executive committee of the union would be asked tomorrow' to order a walkout of allied workers. Gorman accompanied his threat with a bitter denunciation of General Hugh S. Johnson, adding that “if General Johnson is an officer in NRA at the time the A. F. of L. convention meets, our delegation in that convention will introduce a resolution demanding either his resignation or his discharge. Gorman said that national guardsmen and deputy sheriffs attempted to establish a reign of terror in the strike zones today, but that reports indicated the strike was more successful than ever. He declared the strike was completely effective in spite of the fact that “our organizers and pickets are being thrown into jail almost by the hundreds.” He said production in the mills was inconsequential and not sufficient to indicate that the mills still open were maintaining any more than mere skeleton forces. Worker Is Slugged After a week-end marked by one minor disturbance directly attributable to feeling between strikers and working employes and by reports of other such disturbances, the United Textile Workers of America strike against the Indianapolis Bleaching Company, 900 West Wabash street, was proceeding without incident today. Determination of the strikers to hold their lines and announcement by Charles A. Young, plant manager, that he believed the strike was being broken combined, however, to keep fear of violence, such as has been seen in eastern and southern textile centers, in the foreground. Mr. Young said he believed he had the strikers “licked” and added that, if a checkup of his business revealed conditions justify putting on a second shift to work, he would take this step at once. In its first few days, the strike reduced plant operations from three shifts, with a total of approximately 600 employes, to one shift with less than 200 persons. The plant manager tempered his claim of apparent victory with the admision that the strikers had “crippled” the company by causing it to lose business. The one incident of violence definitely attributed by police to the strike occurred yesterday when a group of five men invaded the home of Thomas McCammack, 63, of 720 West New York street, and slugged him. One of the men was a striker. Mr. McCammack told police, adding that he would swear out a warrant for the man's arrest some time today, He said he could not identify the other four. Queen Greets Princess By United Press BALMORAL CASTLE, Scotland, Sept. 17.—Queen Mary greeted Princess Marina, her daughter-in-law-to-be, with a kiss today when the princess arrived at Balmoral Castle with Prince George, her fiancee.

youth of 15 years, who did not belong aboard the ship but had boarded to help Ramos with his cleaning. 3. An open paint can, possibly inflammable, was in the engine room of the ship a day or so prior to the fire and was seen there by Chief Engineer Eben Abbott, Joseph Bergstein. a pasenger testified. He also testified that there was "trouble” among the dining room stewards and that his son found a nail in some lamb chops, which Bergstein presented in a manenr to suggest possible sabotage by a surly waiter. Kopf also caused a stir in the federal court-room where the hearing is being conducted by testimonyrelating to the actions of Abbott and conflicting with some of Abbott's earlier testimony. The chief engineer previously had admitted that he never went to the engine room after the fire broke out and that he left the ship in No. 1 life boat within half an hour after the fire alarm and while many passengers were still on the aft decks, cut off from the boat deck. Abbott said the master. Acting Captain W. F. Warps, ordered him

Ecrered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolis, Ind.

Lawyer Files Petitions for Writs of Habeas Corpus for Gilbert Jacobs and Mrs. Dimmie Dillon, Boy’s Mother. ARRESTS ILLEGAL, SAYS ATTORNEY Move May Force Police to Show Evidence They Have Accumulated Against Couple, If Any, Observers Point Out. Court action designed to free from police custoday Mrs. Dimmie Dillon, 35, mother of the brutally murdered 13-year-old Donald Dillon, and Gilbert Jacobs, 37-year-old factory worker, for whom Mrs. Dillon keeps house and with whom she ajid her children have lived for more than a year, was initiated today by their attorney. The lawyer, Lawrence Shaw, appeared before Judge Joseph R. Williams in superior court two and filed petitions

50 MORE CALLED FOR DEAN JURY Fifth Venire Reports for Duty; Examination May End Today. Conscientious objections to capital punishment and occupational reasons necessitating the excuse of thirty-five out of fifty prospective jurors today led Special Judge Clyde H. Jones to summon a sixth venire of fifty men in the murder trial of Edward (Foggy) Dean in criminal court. The fifth venire, w’hich reported yesterday, rapidly was exhausted. With the calling of the new panel 262 veniremen will have appeared for examination. Judge Jones, Floyd Mattice, chief deputy prosecutor, and Clyde Miller, defense counsel, are determined to conclude examination of jurors today to permit submission of testimony not later than tomorrow morning. Meanwhile the courtroom continues to be guarded heavily by armed detectives and uniformed police. COUNTY TAX ROARD STUDIES CITY RATE Officials to Attend Budget Session Today. The civil city budget will be considered by the Marion county tax adjustment board late today follow’ing a meeting this morning at w’hich time Frank Quinn and Cornelius F. Posson were named chairman and vice-chairman, respectively, of the board. Representatives of the city government were expected to attend the session this afternoon. Harry Miesse, Indiana Taxpayers Association secretary, will appear before the board tomorrow to oppose the civil city budget on grounds that insufficient miscellaneous revenues w’ere contemplated in its preparation. The board scheduled its budget studies as civil city, first; school city, county. Marion county townships and incorporated towms, in the order named. YOUTH KILLED WHEN TRAIN STRIKES AUTO John Brouhard, Greenfield, Dies in Hospital Here. John W. Brouhard. 18, Greenfield, injured last night when his automobile was struck by a Pennsylvania railroad train near Greenfield, died this afternoon at Methodist hospital.

into the boat because he was almost overcome by smoke. “The chief engineer several times asked that the life boat be lowered,” Kopf testified. “That was about ten minutes after I had come on the boat deck, which I reached directly after being awakened by the fire alarm.” There were two or three passengers, the chief engineer, some men from the engine room and mostly stewards in the No. 1 boat. So far as Kopf could say there was never any order from the bridge for the boat to be lowered and he said that at one time there was an order for it not to be lowered. Warms Fired in 1926 By United Press NEW YORK. Sept. 17.—William F. Warms, acting captain of the liner Morro Castle, had his master’s license suspended for ten days and was discharged by the Ward line in 1926 for failing to hold fire drills aboard the Ward liner Yumuri, records of his trial before a board of the steamboat inspection service [showed today.

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cent#

j for writs of habeas corpus j for Jacobs and Mrs. Dillon, each of whom now is held in $5,000 bond on vagrancy charges. Judge Williams set hearing on the writs for 10 a. m. tomorrow. Mr. Shaw alleged in his petitions that, since neither had committed a crime or had been charged with committing a crime, both were arrested illegally and added that both were being restrained from liberty without warrant on "pretended” charges of vagrancy. He charged further that they had been subjected to repeated questioning by Lieutenant Donald Tooley, homicide squad head. The court move, which will force the police to show what evidence they may have accumulated against either of the pair, came as police, apparently having abandoned the theory that young Donald was killed by a moron, seemed to be concentrating their efforts on attempting to establish a case against Jacobs. Proclaims "Romantic” Feeling Hearing on the writs also may throw light on the exact status of Jacobs in the Dillon household. Mrs. Dillon divorced her husband, Shirley C. Dillon, Remington, Ind., a year ago. She has proclaimed to reporters a “romantic feeling” for Jacobs and has said that she would have married him by now except I for the fact that her divorce de- | cree carries a temperoray prohibi- ' tion against remarriage. Jacobs, master of the house at 1871 Shelby street from which Donald disappeared a week ago yesterday, has been held since a few hours after the finding of the boy's tortured body in Pleasant Run creek Tuesday. The mother was arrested Friday night, after she had been questioned intensively for six hours following the boy’s burial in New Crown cemetery. Today was not expected to bring another search of the Dillon house, thoroughly gone over Saturday by homicide squad detectives and Deputy Coroner John E. Wyttenbach since Saturday's search is believed to have uncovered little of value. There was a report, which lacked confirmation, that an acquaintance of Jacobs was being sought in the belief he could throw valuable light on the murder. It was believed this might be based on the fact that Saturday, while police apparently still were | considering the degenerate theory, an alarm had been sent out for the arrest of a south side man of this i type whose home is near that of the Dillons. Police were secretive as to what developments over the week-end had caused the sudden intensifying of their efforts to connect Jacobs with the crime, but it was understood that great importance was laid on the gag found in the boy’s mouth and on a report that Jacobs had been drinking heavily the afternoon before Donald’s disappearance a week ago yesterday. At the same time, police verified neighborhood gossip that Mrs. Dillon and Jacobs had quarreled frequently and that Donald had been involved in these arguments on more than one occasion. Detectives have established, too, | that two small life insurance policies, one for sll9 and one for SSO, • was carried on the boy’s life. It was reported at the time of the finding of Donald's body that he was uninsured. The comparatively .small amounts payable on the poli- | cies seemed, however, to deprive : the fact of their finding of any special significance. CLOSE VOTE FORESEEN IN MISSISSIPPI RUNOFF | Stephens and Bilbo Battle for Senator Post Tomorrow. I By United Press JACKSON. Miss.. Sept. 17.—Mis- • sissippi will nominate a United States senator tomorrow in a runoff primary between the incumbent Hubert D. Stephens and Theodore G. Bilbo, former Governor. A vote of 170.000 is forecast, with not more than 10,000 votes separating the two candidates. Stephens is backed by the “conservative” element, Bilbo offers to “raise more hell in the senate than Huey Long. 4