Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1934 — Page 1

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‘WE HAVE FAITH IN you; m’nutt told IN FORUM MEETING Audience Roars Approval as Governor Dares G. O. P., Especially Li’l Arthur, to Answer His Questions. * PREDICTS SWEEPING DEMOCRAT WIN ‘We’re On the Right Trail at Crown Point and Republicans Are Worried,’ Chief Executive Declares. Having made himself the target for hostile questioners in the past, Governor Paul V. McNutt last night turned the tables on his Republican adversaries, particularly Senator Arthur R. Robinson, and asked them, publicly, a, series of questions designed to be very embarrassing, indeed. At the same time, the Governor gave a large Fourteenth ward meeting at Warren and Oliver avenues assurance that the state was “on the right trail” in its Crown Point jail-

break expose and hinted that the Republicans were panicky as to where the trail might lead. “How about free speech?” shouted a questioner In the back of the hall after the Governor had finished a bripf. prepared speech. "Can we ask you anything?" ’ Anything you like," the Governor replied. ‘ The sky is the limit ” Previously, Governor McNutt has spoken to audiences which he has had to win over to his side, but last night the crowd was his before he began. “Has any one been calling me a era: or a dictator out here?” the Governor asked. “What does it matter? What do you care?” cried several voices. Hts own voice husky from a whirlwind speaking tour which he has conducted through every congressional district in the state, the Governor said: *‘l don’t care. It was necessary to co-ordinate departments to do away with the waste and loose administration of the Republican administration.” On the Right Trail • What about Crown Point?” asked the wrathy questioner. Several voices out in the crowd shouted. “ We have faith in you.” “We’re on the right trail.” the Governor stated. “Why are the Republicans so interested in stopping our investigation? I know, but just the same. I’ll ask them that question now." “Maybe that's why Lil Arthur wants you to stop,” cried one of the audience, referring to the Republican senator, seeking re-election in this campaign. “That's one of the reasons." the Governor replied. A woman standing In the rear of the hall wanted to know why “a Republican PER A officer had discharged twenty-six laborers yesterday” “What about that?” the Governor asked. “If someone will bring me the facts of the case. I will investigate tomorrow morning ” Challenges Li’l Arthnr In answer to a rumor that his administration has cost the citizens money by recent school book adoptions the Governor said. “Actually our school book adoptions have saved the people $195,000 in the fiveyear contract.” Then the Governor turned the tables on the Republicans. “Now,” he said. "I want to ask the Republicans some questions. I have dared Li'l Arthur to answer the people as I have and he has failed.” Some of the questions Governor McNutt asked the G. O. P. leadership were: Will you return tfie old personnel of the public service commission and the old practice of permitting the public utilities to write their own ticket on rate and service matters affecting consumers? Will you return the regulation of banks to the political nonfunctioning sort of a bank commission we had before 1933? Will you administer poor relief and re-employment with better efficiency than the present state administration has done so that it now merits the distinction of being the first state in the Union in point of efficiency and dispatch in the handling of emergency federal aid? Will you repeal the old age pension law about which your platform savs nothing? How do you expect to keep the public schools open? * Why haven't you told the voters that the tax plank in your platform, translated into action, will either require a 5 per cent sales tax to replace school revenues that you would eliminate and mean complete financial breakdown of all states and municipal corporations or else require a 12 per cent sales tax to replace all the present revenues your program would eliminate? 39.494~CATTL ES ENT TO INDIANA BY FERA 24.21* Proceed; 15.276 Still Await Slaughter. By T imet Special WASHINGTON. Nov. 3 —lndiana has received 39.494 head of drought relief cattle purchased and distributed by the federal emergency relief administration, it was reported here today. Os this total. 24.218 have been processed for food and distributed to unemployed families or given to farm families to feed. *>lief officials still have 15.276 on ruijd In the state, the report said.

The Indianapolis Times

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VOLUME 46—NUMBER 151

PEACE RATIFIED IN A. & P, FIGHT Both Sides Agreeable to Seven-Point Plan of Labor Board. By Timet Special WASHINGTON. Nov. 3.—Reopening of the 300 Cleveland stores of The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company was assured this afternoon when a seven-point peace plan formulated by the national labor relations board was accepted by both employes and employers. The national labor relations board was formerly advised of the decisions by the warring parties in a telegram from Thomas S. Farrell, secretary of the Cleveland Federation of Labor, and, by long-distance etlephone. from New York, where the A. & P. directors had been meeting. In behalf of the unions involved in the A. & P. controversy at Cleveland, Mr. Farrell telegraphed the board as follows: “Please be advised that unions involved in the A. & P. controversy in Cleveland have agreed to your proposal as a settlement of that dispute.” Later the board was advised by telephone from John A. Hartford, president of the nation-wide grocery chain, that the company also had accepted the suggestion presented to both parties. COPELAND ELECTION IS DESIRED BY ROOSEVELT President Puts in Good Word for New York Senator. fit failed Prr*t HYDE PARK. N. Y., Nov. 3 President Roosevelt wants to see United States Senator Royal S. Copeland. New York Democrat, reelected, it was learned today at the summer White House. Mr. Roosevelt, who returned to Hyde Park in order to personally cast his vote for his party's ticket next Tuesday, did not put forth his views on Senator Copeland in a formal statement as did for Governor Herbert H. Lehman, but neverthless it was made plain that he was for the senator. ASH COLLECTION GOES ON WINTER SCHEDULE Garbage to Re Picked Up Once a Week Starting Today. Collection of ashes and garbage today was changed from the summer to the winter schedule. Ashes, according to Truly Nolen, superintendent of ash and garbage collection of the sanitary board, will be collected weekly during winter months instead of every other week as in the summer months. Collection days will remain the same. Garbage will be collected weekly instead of twice a week as during the summer period. Policeman Sues for $20,000 Patrolman Harry Nageleisen. 35 North Linwood avenue, today filed suit in superior court against El wood R. Lindesmith. 3055 North Meridian street, asking $20,000 for alleged injuries suffered by Nageleisen when he was struck by a car driven by the defendant.

Community Fund Canvassers Hope to Pass $600,000 Mark Over Week-End

With no report meeting scheduled until Monday noon. 3.003 volunteer workers in the fifteenth annual Indianapolis Community Fund drive today determined to raise the total of pledges over the week-end to S6OO 000. A total of $549,494 10 had been subscribed when the canvassers submitted report* at yesterday's report meeting in the Claypool. where Arthur V. Brown, campaign chairman, pleaded for success of the drive, rhe campaign goal is $727,217. “This campaign, which must be a success if the city's less fortunate

Insull Defends Flight to Europe; Back to Wall, He Angrily Denies Charges Refused to Return From Paris Because He Would Have Been ‘Crucified’ by Politicians, Former Utility Baron Shouts. I By Timm Special CHICAGO. Nov. 3.—Rising to the climax of an almost unparalleled court ordeal, 74-year-old Samuel Insull attempted tc justify today his flight tc Europe in 1932 while his $2,000,000,000 utility empire crumbled behind him. “I refused to return from Paris to Chicago,” he shouted at Special Prosecutor Leslie E. Salter, ‘‘because I did not want to be ‘pu’ied through the streets in chains’ as politicians here promised I would be. “Self preservation is the first law of nature and I would have been crucified if I had returned then. A man slapped on one cheek ordinarily does not go 8.000 riiiles to get slapped on the other.” In his last retort to a withering fire of questions shot at him without a break for ninety minutes the belligerent former monarch of millions denied that he stooped to dishonesty or even subterfuge in attempts to ram stock of the giant Corporation Securities Company into the investment portfolios of the public. Cross examination ended on a high note as court was adjourned

until Monday, with Insull shouting that "the public trusted me and still would trust me if my acts were the sole basis of judgment.” "I could have told them every detail of bookkeeping in the companies involved and I still could have sold stock. There was no reason for misrepresentation.” Only once during the day did Insull appear seriously embarrassed by the barrage of questions laid down by Mr. Waltei* in the last hour of an ordeal which kept the frail defendant on the witness stand for three days. Taken by Surprise That was when the prosecutor, poking an accusing finger at Insull, asked him: "Did you know' that in 1928 your Middle ‘ West Utilities Company showed a depreciation item of $12,400.000 while your financial statement neglected to take account of it? And did you know that if it had been taken account of, Middle West Utilities would have showed a loss of more than $1,000,000 for the year?” Insull's mouth gaped open momentarily as, obviously surprised, he digested the question. He half turned toward his atorney, Floyd E. Thompson, before he answered. Never Saw Books ‘‘l never saw the books,” he finally responded. "I know nothing about the accounting details. I then considered, and I still dor that Middle West w'as the cornerstone of the Insull companies.” As he walked out of the courtroom after adjournment, leaning on Thompson’s arm, he remarked: “I | thought they had me on the ropes for a minute.” Despite fatigue which was obvious as he mounted the witness stand this morning, the stooped and grayhaired defendant fought shrewdly and tellingly to get his story of the Insull financial crash before the jury. Reprimanded by Judge He was reprimanded once by Judge James H. Wilkerson for his irascibility in answering questions with counter questions and extraneous comment. Mr. Salter asked him about the original costs of stock which he sold to Corporation Securities Company, through w'hich the government charges Insull and sixteen associates mulcted a half million investors. "Original costs have nothing to do with it,” Insull shrilled. "Figuring on the basis of original casts, you might as well say that Henry Ford has nothing because he started with nothing.” “You’re a bit touchy on this subject, aren’t you?” asked Mr. Salter. “No. sir. I’m not a bit touchy,” retorted Insull. “I don’t like misrepresentations.” He apologized to Judge Wilkerson, but continued to glare at his prosecutor.

TODAY'S WEATHER

Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 46 10 a. m 57 7a. m 48 11 a. m 62 Ba. m 52 12 (noon).. 66 9a. m 54 Ip. m 67 Sunrise tomorrow, 6:18; sunset, 4:39. In the Air. Weather conditions at 9 a. m.: South, southeast wind, sixteen miles an hour; barometric pressure, 29.80 at sea level: temperature, 54; ceiling, 2,500 feet; visibility, ten miles. PAPALACfION AWAITED ON MEXICAN DISPUTE Holy Father Considers Issuing Encyclical of Protest. By United Prett VATICAN CITY. Nov. 3. The Pope was understood today to be considering the issuance of an encyclical protesting against the Mexican government s course in attacking opponents of its rationalistic educational program. Roman Catholic in Mexico oppose ti:e program, which forbids religious instruction in schools, and the government has alleged that Catholic churchmen are inciting to rebellion.

are to be cared for." said Mr. Brown, “will be a success if we continue to obtain increased gifts from donors of last year and pledges from persons who did not subscribe a year ago.” Anew subscription was reported from Ford Motor Company employes. who contributed $241.50. Other employe pledges were: HerffJones Company, $953.5#; Fair Store, $169.30; Furnas Ice Cream Company. $81.50; Railway Express Agency. $190: Severin hotel, $69.30; Seville Tavern. S2O: Indianapolis Medical Glass Works, $50.50.

Showers tonight, becoming fair and colder tomorrow.

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1934

NAZI ARREST IS LARK TO ‘SPIES’ Y * Young Americans Amused by Incident; Declared Closed by U. S. By Times Special MUNICH, Nov. 3.—American consular officials dismissed as an ‘ unfortunate incident” today the imprisonment, stripping and searching of Miss Helen Lyster of New Rochelle, N. Y., and Griffith Johnson of Washington as suspected spies. Miss Lyster was searched by a matron. Diplomatic conequences, it was said, were regarded as unlikely because Miss Lyster and Mr. Johnson regarded the incident as a lark and did not wish to have it carried farther. The two young Americans were at the Munich airdrome Tuesday, watching a drill by Nazi “SS” men, the crack black uniformed special Storm Troop contingent. The army garrison frequently drills there, and there are signs forbidding any one to go on the field. Neither Miss Lyster nor Mr. Johnson reads German, and the “SS” men are supposed to be a nonmilitary body as Germany's armed forces are limited by treaty. • Miss Lyster had a camera with her. An “SS” officer approached her and Mr. Johnson and questioned them. They said they were merely watching the drill as tourists. Miss Lyster and Mr. Johnson were arrested. Mr. Johnson said they were questioned and told repeatedly that they were arrested on a charge of espionage, presumably because Miss Lyster had a camera. After nine hours they were released, police having developed the films in Miss Lyster’s camera, to find that she had not used them. During the period of their detention they were kept in separate cells and were not permitted to communicate with the American consulate or obtain legal aid.

AUTO MISHAP FATAL TO MILITANT EDITOR Don M. Dixon, 54, Owned Six Newspapers. By United Press MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Nov. 3 Don Morrison Nixon. 54, editor and publisher of six daily newspapers in Indiana, Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky, died today of injuries received in an automobile accident Oct. 29. He did not regain consciousness after being taken to a hospital with a brain concussion. Mr. Nixon began his newspaper work as a ship news reporter forty years ago in New York, after leaving his home in Spring Creek, Pa. He received additional fame in 1932 during contempt of court proceedings filed against him in Wabash circuit court when through his newspaper he challenged the appointment of “a village garage proprietor” as receiver to liquidate a million dollars in deposits in a Wabash bank. He was noted as a fearless and liberal crusader.

The Ho Hum Department

By Timet Special WASHINGTON, Ind., Nov. 3.—The “fact” that the national administration was “wholly without a plan and wholly without a program” in the face of "a rising tide of unemployment and an increase in business failures” continued to worry Senator Arthur R. (Li’l Arthur) Robinson this afternoon as he closed his campaign here.

His speech here and one he was scheduled to make at Evansville tonight closed Senator Robinson’s campaign for re-election, in which he has “viewed with alarm” what he calls America’s trek down “the

Other subscriptions were Hotel Riley Inc., $26.35; Thirtieth and Central Sales Company, $95.25; Capital and Standard Paper Company. $104; William B. Burford Printing Company, $134: John Deere Plow Company, $25. and Sugar Creek Creamery Comoany, $36.50. Indianapolis Bond and Share Company employes gave $36; Crown Laundry Company, $74.50; Fulton Hosiery Company, $159.50; General Tire Company. $93.50; Indiana Trust Company, $36; Two-in-One Shinola Bixby Corporation. $90.50.

m ARTHUR’ MOST EMBARRASSING INDIVIDUAL IN SENATE, SAYS TOBIN, URGING LABOR TO ELECT MINTON

POET'SSLfIYER PINS HOPES ON LOVELETTERS Defense to Call Prosecutor in Fight to Get Notes Into Record. By United Press WOODLAND, Cal., Nov. 3. Fighting to get into the records the passionate love letters that form the chronicle of the “White Hibiscus” romance, defense attorneys planned today to subpena the prosecutor in the trial of Judson C. Doke, charged with slaying his wife’s poet-lover. By making District Attorney C. C. McDonald virtually a witness for the defense, A. C. Huston Sr. and A. C. Huston Jr. hoped to overcome previous court objections to introduction of the letters alleged to have been exchanged between Helen Louise Doke and 23-year-old Lamar Hollir.gshead, winner of campus poetry prizes. , The trial was in recess until Monday as the attorneys plotted an intricate legal move. They were balked twice yesterday in direct demands that Mr. McDonald produce the letters. Judge Neal Chalmers dismissed the jury during the argument. Depend on Unwritten Law The next step, the Hustons said, will be to seek a “duces tecum” subpena which would require Mr. McDonald to bring the correspondence before the eight men and four women selected to decide Doke’s fate. The defense is depending on reading the letters to a middle-eged jury as the bulwark of its case, based on the “unwritten law.” Ardent protestations of an illicit love abound in the sheaf of correspondence found in Doke’s automobile after he had shot and killed young Hollingshead at a Dunnigan ranch where the youth was working to obtain funds to continue his college career last July. Letters already published tell of “tremulous longings,’ of secret trysts in blossoming orchards and country hotels, of hopes that “some day we might experience the great mystery together—that of creating a like spirit!” Dying Statement Attacked The prosecution almost had completed its presentation when the trial recessed. There remained argument over a statement made by Hollingshead as he lay in the Woodlahd hospital, where he died within a few hours after Doke had shot him. Prosecutor McDonald presented the statement as the "dying statement” of the youth. The Hustons attacked it as not proving that Hollingshead was dying or that he knew he was near death. The controversy will be the first thing to be disposed of when the trial resumes Monday. Incidentally it was learned that the illicit romance of Hollingshead and Mrs. Doke was known to relatives of the two poetry lovers, according to revelations today in letters purportedly written by Hollingshead to Mrs. Doke. Recalls Visit to Mother One letter, written while the young poet was working with a harvest crew near here last summer, said: “How much closer we have come to each other by your seeing my family and having mother to tease. How tremulous you must have felt and deeply touched when my mother told you how she felt before my birth. “My mother instinctively likes you and subconsciously knows that we love each other and that it is right. Mother once painted landscapes. They were quite beautiful. I admired them.”

road to Moscow” in eighty-six of Indiana's ninety-tw’o counties. This afternoon he continued to “view w r ith alarm” to the bitter end and. at the same time, proposed what he called “the Republican plan for recovery.” This he summed up as follows: “The way out is the path of recovery through returning jobs to the unemployed, through thawing the markets of investment in order that business and industry may be financed and through the route of withdrawing government from the many paths of business in which it is competing.” He also advocated “loans for industry. large and small, without the impending obstruction of red tape.” Some of what he said sounded to Washingtonians strangely like rewarded New Deal projects, while his fears of government in business were familiar. Lamenting the government’s lack of policy, he said the administration was “without a political philosophy except the subversive ideas of radicals in, key positions.”

ASSAILS L’lL ARTHUR

■BHr

Daniel Tobin

Democratic Landslide Is Certain in Congress Race New Deal to Retain Steam-Roller Majorities in Senate and House, National Survey Shows. By United Press NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—Democrats have the election won three days before the golls open but there is no assurance that President Roosevelt will be able to control the congress which will be voted into office next Tuesday. National surveys reveal New Deal prestige somewhat diminished. But it still is sufficient to what will look like steam roller majorities in house

and senate. Democratic majorities of two-thirds in both houses may be counted after Tuesday’s polling. House Democrats now number 308 to 115 Republicans, five FarmerLaborites and seven vacancies. The Democrats could lase eighteen votes and retain the two-thirds majority which, under present rules, is of prime necessity in imposing gag restrictions to speed legislation. A gain of four senate seats would give the Democrats a two-thirds count of sixty-four against thirtytwo for the opposition. But there is more prestige than utility in the Dig Democratic majorities which will be present in the seventy-fourth congress. The party is under tei rifle internal strain. Republican opposition will be almast powerless acting alone. But with assistance from Democratic bolters, Republicans may be able to cause serious trouble.

5 Linked to Slot Machine Hijackers Following Raid Ray Rairdon Now in Custody, Named as Leader by Police; Tools and Parts Used by Gang Seized. Police have broken up the gang which last summer “hijacked” twenty slot machines from four Indianapolis clubs and, in so doing, caused a scare of a gang war over slot machine spoils. Announcement that the gang had been smashed was made by police today after a raid late yesterday afternoon by four detectives on a house at 5253 Hardegan street, where three bushel basketful of smashed

slot machines parts, three slot machines and tools for changing serial numbers on slot machines were seized. The four detectives who made the raid were credited by police officials with having established the identity of the “hijackers.” with having run them to ground and with having obtained confessions from four men, the alleged “muscle men” of the mob, implicating a fifth, their alleged chief. This man, police say, is Ray Rairdon, 41, of 1033 Willow drive, once described by Chief Mike Morrissey as the “key to the slot machine racket situation in Indianapolis.” Rairdon is in the county jail in default of SIO,OOO bond, charged with receiving nine stolen slot machines. He pleaded not guilty yesterday and tried vainly to have his bond reduced. The other four alleged members of the mob are Raymond Moon, now a convict at the Indiana state prison, Michigan City: Orval Snyder, now an inmate of the Indiana state reformatory, Pendleton: Fred Wikles, 46, of 800 East Main street, Broad Ripple, and Chester Ballard, 27, of 6543 Carrollton avenue. Wikles and Ballard are free under $1,500 bond each on charges of having stolen from the Silver King Novelty Company. 621 Capitol avenue, the nine slot machines which Rairdon is accused of having purchased with the knowledge that they were stolen. Police say that Wikles is a former employe of the novelty company and related to the proprietor by marriage. Moon and Snyder are “serving time” for the holdup of a Kokomo gasoline filling station and Moon is said by police to have been shot in the mouth here in an unsuccessful attempt to holdup John Dressel, 66, of 6202 North Keystone avenue, proprietor of a bar >ecue and beer parlor. The raid yesterday afternoon produced evidence of the way the “hijackers” disposed of their stolen machines. One “Pee-Wee” brand 5-cent machine had its number filed off as had a machine of another brand. The equipment for

Entered as Second-Clasa Matter . it rostoffice, Indianapolis. Ind.

‘Roosevelt Anxious for Indiana to Retire Its Senior Senator,’ A. F. of L. Executive Asserts in Radio Talk. ‘TIN-HORN POLITICIAN,’ HE SHOUTS Robinson ‘Obstructionist Who Forgets Best Interests of State,’ Union Leader Declares in Bitter Attack. “I have no hesitancy in saying that the most embarrassing individual in the United States senate to the Pr *sident of the United States is the senior senator from Indiana, Arthur Robinson.’’ With a whip-cracking voice, this message was given to labor of Hoosierland last night over the ether waves when Daniel J. Tobin, international labor official, urged the workingmen of Lake county over radio station WIND, Gary, to

In addition to the more conservative minded Democrats, mostly anti-New Dealers in the senate, who may be expected to join the opposition from time to time on the Roosevelt reform program, there still is a larger Democratic bloc which will try to out-do the New Deal in so-called radical legislation. Senator Elmer Thomas (Dem., Okla.) has spoken for the senate inflation bloc. He wants further currency reform beginning with absolute government control of the federal reserve system. The federal reserve banks are owned by the thousands of commercial banks which comprise the federal reserve system. Senator Thomas would have the government buy up all stock in the reserve banks at a cost of $187,000,000. That would give the treasury control of credit in the United States.

changing numbers included dies and an emery wheel. The men who “broke” the case, made the arrests and conducted yesterday’s raid are Detective Sergeants Ferdinand Holt. Roy S. Kennedy, Louis Fossati and Philip Miller. News of the “hijackers’ ” activities i were revealed first in a series of exclusive stories which appeared in The Indianapolis Times last July. M 0 0 N SHI NINGD 0 ESN’T PAY, JUDGE IS TOLD Didn't Earn SIOO Fine. Still Owner Informs Court. Lawrence H. Hasfurther, a young farmer from Dubois county, admitted today in federal court that, from a financial point of view, keeping a still just doesn’t pay. Hasfurther told Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell that he had not made SIOO from his still. Judge Baltzeli upheld a previous ruling that Hasfurther must pay a SIOO fine but suspended a six months’ jail sentence during good behavior. trappeeTby flames, ENTIRE FAMILY DIES Canadians Burned to Death When Furnace Explodes. By United Prett HULL, Quebec, Nov. 3.—The lives of a mother and father and their two babies were lost today when fire, believed to have been caused by an explosion in a furnace, trapped them in their beds. The dead; John Campeau, 30; his wife Jean, 35, and their two children, Denise, 16 months and Leo. 4 months. CHAIN STORE FOUNDER IS BURIED IN SOUTH Last Rites Are Held in Asheville for William Kroger. By United Prett ASHEVILLE. N. C„ Nov. 3.—William Kroger, 79, chain store magnate, was buried here today. Mr. Kroger was found dead in his hotel room. Death was caused by heart disease, the coroner reported.

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents

support Sherman Minton, Democratic senatorial nominee. “I have no hesitancy in saying to you that there isn’t a man in the United States senate on the opposition side that the President is more anxious to see the people refuse to return to office, than Arthur Robinson,” declared the American Federation of Labor executive. “He has made it a practice for the last two years, on every opportunity, to forget the best interests of Indiana—yours and mine—and enter into what might be called just a ‘tin horn political squabble’ with somebody or something in which the President was seriously interested,” he declared. “I beseech you to vote for Sherman Minton. There is no room in our civilization for obstructionists. We must pull together as a unit or else we are bound to go backward.” Mr. Tobin said in his stirring plea to Indiana labor. Mr. Tobin, president of the International Teamsters' Union, will speak Monday night in a final attack against Senator Robinson over a five-station hookup composed of WKBF, Indianapolis, WOWO, Ft. Wayne; WGBF, Evansville; WBOW, Terre Haute and WAVE, Louisville. The broadcast will begin at 10 p. m. in WKBF. More than 20,000 “Stand by Roosevelt” clubs of Indiana will hear the fifteen-minute broadcast. Omer S. Jackson, Democratic state chairman; Mrs. Emery School, Mrs. Samuel B. Ralston, and Thomas Taggart Jr. will be other speakers in the final radio hookup of the campaign. GIRL HURT SERIOUSLY IN AUTO CRASH HERE Suffers Possible Skull Fracture; Uncle Also Hurt. Two persons were injured, one seriously, this afternoon when the auto driven by John H. Andrews, 66, of Aurora, Ind., was struck by a car driven by George G. Toon, 75, of 1723 Hawthorne lane, at Emerson and Southeastern avenues. Miss Marie Andrews. 19, niece of Mi. Andrews, suffered a possible skull fracture and Mr. Andrews, bruises and cuts. They were taken to city hospital. KINGS FOR mTt HTo RESUME FLIGHT TODAY Australian, Twice Delayed, to Leave Honolulu for U. S. By Timet Special HONOLULU, T. H„ Nov. 3.—With naval aerologists assuring him his course lies beyond the range of present storms, Sir Charles Kings-ford-Smith planned to make his twice-delayed departure today from Honolulu for Oakland, Cal., and the end of his Au3tralia-to-Califomia flight. As on the other two occasions on which he tried to get away, the Australian set the take-off time for between noon and 2 p. m. Honolulu time, (between 4:30 and 6:30 p. m. Indianapolis time). Times Index Page. Bridge 4 Broun 7 Business News 6 Church Services • 11 Comics 13 Crossword Puzzle 11 Curious World ~t • 13 Editorial 8 Financial 14 Pegler • 7 Radio 2 Sports 10, 11 State News 2 Woman’s Pages 4, 5

SERVICE TO VOTERS Asa service to the voters of Indianapolis, The Times Monday and Tuesday will follow its custom of informing its readers where to vote. Staff members will answer telephone calls for voting place information between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday, and from 7 a. m- to 6 p. m. ‘Tuesday, election day. Just teiephone RI. 5551 and ask for Election Information. A list of the official voting places, by precincts, is published in The Times today on Page 3.