Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 138, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1934 — Page 27

OCT. 19, 1934

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Sikorsky, airplane desurner, told the ! federal aviation commission today. He said that these flying giants would drop bombs at the rate of five or six a second like a machine gun flings bullets, cutting great swaths of destruction across any ; city they attack. Enemy airplane carriers could rum any American coastal city, he said, if they could approach one thousand miles offshore so that their flying weapons of destruction could take off. "And if liquid hydrogen is developed as a fuel,” he said, “it would be possible for a ship loaded with twenty thousand pounds of bombs to fly direct from Europe.” Mr. Sikorsky said the only hope of combating such an attack would be the development of similar ships in this country for battles against the enemy over midocean.

INTENSIVE HUNT ! FOR KIDNAPER ON IN EAST Robinson Believed Fleeing Through Pennsylvania and Delaware. (Continued From Page One) and threw’ it on a bed for her husband. He made no comment at j first, but he soon began insisting : that she should accompany him on j his flight. She was afraid of her husband by this time and the argument grew tense as she refused to leave with him, she said. Mr. Huggins said that Mrs. Stoll had interceded for Mrs. Robinson at this point, since she wanted her as a protector because of the kindness Mrs. Robinson had shown her during the brief time she had been in the apartment. Robinson finally agreed to this arrangement after Mrs. Stoll had given her word that she would not leave the flat until afternoon. Before leaving, Robinson took the remainder of the expense money given his wife the night before and in return gave her SSOO of the ransom money.

Set Mrs. Stoll Free Mr. Huggins said that Mrs. Rob- ! inson had told him she did not reali ize she was doing anything criminal : in accepting a portion of the ranj som. When Robinson had gone, Mr. Huggins said, Mrs. Robinson freed Mrs. Stoll and told her she might leave, but Mrs. Stoll insisted on carrying out her promise to remain. Mrs. Robinson jave Mrs. Stoll the SSOO, but Mrs. Stoll asked her to keep it since she had no purse or means of carrying the money, Mr. Huggins continued. The two women prepared a light lunch after Mrs. Robinson had gone out for food and beer, for which Mrs. Stoll is said to have expressed a desire. Following the meal they took a taxi to the home of the Rev. E. Arnold Clegg, a few blocks away, where they arrived about 2. Mrs. Robinson had intended to leave Mrs. Stoll at the Cleggs’, Mr. Huggins said, but Mrs. Stoll insisted that she accompany her to Louisville and remain there for a time as her guest. When the Clegg car was halted at Scottsburg by Melvin Purvis, justice department operative, and other federal men, Mrs. Stoll, according to Mr. Huggins, said that Mrs. Robinson was a friend of hers and asked the officers to let her alone. Purvis promised to respect her wish and the two women continued to Louisville in separate cars, she said. Federals Refute Claim So far as is known they have not seen each other since that time. It is known that George Stoll, brother-in-law of the kidnaped woman, asked the manager of a Louisville radio station to broadcast a statement that Mrs. Stoll was grateful to Mrs. Robinson for her kindness and assistance and that she was convinced of her innocence. When informed of Mrs. Robinson’s story a s related by Mr. Huggins, Edward J. Connelley, justice department investigator here, is said to have declared: “Mrs. Robinson had not come into direct contact with federal men until she was arrested. I can’t comment on somebody else’s secondhand interview with her, but I can say that she was not acting under our instructions. We did not confer with her.” Mrs. Robinson is not supposed to have said that she had ever been in “direct contact” with any federal men at any time, but she does insist, according to Mr. Huggins, that she had been told in Nashville that she was acting with the knowledge of the Nashville investigator, who, possibly, is not included in Mr. Connelley s “we.” Prepare Indictments The most glaring flaw in the Hug-gins-Robinson story is the fact that she proceeded to Indianapolis by way of Terre Haute, using both train and taxi, when she might have come by train, with one change of cars at Louisville, which would have gotten her to Indianapolis as quickly as by her more circuitous and less convenient route. Mr. Huggins insisted that Terre Haute is on the most direct route from Nashville to Indianapolis—a fact that may surprise Indianapolis travelers who have occasion to go to Nashville. The fact that Mrs. Robinson chose the routing would lead one to imply that she had

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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reasons for concealing her movements, federal men said. Indictments against all three Robinsons now are being prepared, United States Attorney Thomas J. Sparks said today. They will be presented to a special federal grand jury which Federal Judge Charles I. Dawson has summoned to meet at 10 tomorrow. Notices already have been sent to forty-five prospective jurors. Denies Seeing Woman By United Press NASHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 19. Davidson county’s Attorney-Gen-eral J. Carlton Loser, Nashville, today denied advising Mrs. Thomas H. Robinson Jr. to carry from Nashville to Indianapolis the $50,000 ransom paid for release of Mrs. Berry V. Stoll, Louisville. “I never saw or talked with Mrs. Robinson in my life,” Mr. Loser said, “All my connections with the case were for the purpose of aiding federal authorities and I gave all information to them.” Nobleman-Priest Dies By United Press ROME, Oct. 19.—Prince Alexander Wolkonsky, Russian noblesman who entered the Catholic priesthood in 1930 after the death of his wife in 1924, died today.

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HOUSING REPAIRS NOT TO HIKE ASSESSMENTS State Tax Board Gives Assurance to Fred Hoke. There will be no increases in assessments on property because of repairs or modernization work done under the federal housing administration program, the state tax board announced today. This reassuring news was contained in a letter to Fred Hoke, state housing administration director, from Philip Zoercher, tax board chairman. “It never has been our policy to penalize improvements and we certainly will not begin now,” Mr. Zoercher said i nreference to the matter of repairs or modernization under the housing plan.

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NEW DEAL HAS LOST SUPPORT, POLL INDICATES Indiana Joins 17 States Now Opposed, Digest Vote Shows. By United Press NEW YORK. Oct. 19.—Indications that the New Deal has dropped in popularity from a 69.03 per cent favorable majority six months ago to a bare 50.97 per cent at present, were reported today as the results of a Literary Digest comparison poll. A nation-wide poll of 65.000 persons last March and April, the results of which were not revealed until today, showed sentiment in only one state —Delaware—against the New Deal. A “recheck” poll of the same 65,000 persons conducted in August and September showed seventeen states—Arizona, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island. South Dakota. Vermont and Wyomingunfavorable to administration policies. The decrease in affirmative sentiment in the half-year interval amounted to 18.06 per cent. The seventeen states voting against the New Deal elect a combined total of congressmen equal to nearly one-half the membership of the house of representatives. Five states registered an increase

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RANSOM BILL FINDER

Albert Taul Johnson

A “crazy hunch” led Albert Paul Johnson, 3434 North Rural street, to compare the numbers of the Stoll kidnap ransom $lO bills with one he had received in exchange for two fives. in Roosvelt sentiment. They were Delaware, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina and Utah. Poll Pleases Fletcher By United Press WASHINGTON. Oct. 19.—Henry P. Fletcher, chairman of the Republican national committee today interpreted the latest Literary Digest poll of New Deal sentiment as showing "that the New Deal is sinking fast,” and that the people “are fed up with ballyhoo.”

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LABOR BOARD STUDIES TEXTILE UNION CHARGES Discrimination Allexed .Against Bleachenr at Hearing. The regional labor board today was considering evidence presented yesterday in the dispute between the Indianapolis Bleaching Company, 800 West Wabash street, and the local textile union. The union business agent. Charles Drake, charged that the bleachery had broken faith with President Roosevelt's strike Intervention orders by not re-employing all strikers not convicted of violence. The regional labor board, headed by Robert H. Cowdrill. is acting as an agent of the new national textile board. Mr. Cowdrill said that he would announce the decision of the board in a few davs.

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