Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1935 — Page 1

|

74TH CONGRESS MEETS; SOUTHERNERS, FRIENDLY TO PRESIDENT, AT HELM

Danger of Radical Legislation Diminishes as Leaders Loyal to New Deal Aims Assume Control. TROUBLE DUE ON BONUS, HOWEVER Gag Rule Adopted by House Gives Assurance Roosevelt Will Be Able to Guide Bulk of Legislation. BY LYLE C. WILSON United Pr*M Staff C„rreDnrt?nt WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. —The 74th Congress convened today in command of Southern leaders pledged to enact President Roosevelt's recovery legislation. Danger of radical legislation diminished as legislators met. Business seeking White House protection finds solid foundation for confidence that Mr. Roosevelt will be able to control this Congress on most issues. * Immediate payment of $2,100,000,000 to war veterans in exchange for their service compensation certificates does,

however, promise a hot fight | and possible defeat for antibonus New Dealers. I ndu s t rial improvement i and re-employment of millions of the .lobless depend largely now on the House and Senate i which met today for the first j time after the Democratic| emotion sweep on last Nov. 6. J Two-thirds majorities in both. Houses c’aim allegiance to the Administration. But Democratic j forces are divided on banking, in-: dustrial. relief and social security | legislation which will top this session in importance and bitterness m debate. Mr. Roosevelt waits in the White House for word from Congress that I it is in session and ready to hear j any message he may care to deliver. ' Galleries Are Crowded Public galleries in the Senate filled slowly, but seats reserved for members and their families were taken lons before Vice President John N. Garner called Senators to order. ! Senator Pat Harrison I D. Miss.) escorted his new colleague, the colorful Theodore Bilbo, on a tour of the chamber and smoking rooms. It developed Senator Carl A. Hatch <D.. N M. would be unable to take the oath until corrected copies of his election certificate are received from the Governor of New Mexico. Senator J. Hamilton Lewis <D.. 11l ), known as the best-dressed Senator, was in his He wore a brown suit, wing collar and double-breasted light brown vest. Republicans had difficulty finding their places. The overwhelming Democratic majority forced a rearrangement of seats. Mrs. Roosevelt Present Mrs. Roosevelt, accompanied by two friends, took places in the presidential gallery in the House. She attended to see her friend. Mrs. Caroline O'Day. sworn in as Repre-sentative-at-Large from New York. Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers <R.. Mass.) wore a purple sown adorned with an orchid. Rep. Florence Kahn <R . Cal.) wore a large gardenia shoulder bouquet. Mayor Fiorello La Guardia of New York, a former Congressman, joined the throng on the House floor. Postmaster General James A Farley was a guest on the Senate floor. He had a broad smile and hearty handshake for the new Democrats who crowded around him. Budget Message Monday Organization formalities today are preliminary to the first big show tomorrow when President Roosevelt will appear before a joint session of both houses to read nis annual message on the state of the nation. On Monday Mr. Roosevelt will send to Congress the budget message. It will reveal how far he has missed the goal of a year ago which was to balance Federal inco ne and expenditure on July 1. 1935. Prayer for divine guidance in solving the problems of recovery will inaugurate the work of House and Senate a few moments after noon. Vice President John N Garner will call the Senate to order. South Trimble, clerk of the House, will hold the gavel there until Rep Joseph W. Bvms <D.. Tenn.) can be elected to the Speakership. Bankhead New Leader Rep. William B. Bankhead (D. Ala.) succeeds to the Democratic leadership vacated by Mr. Pvrr£ promotion. Rep Bertrand H Snell R.. N. Y.) remains in command of the diminished Republican house minority. Senator Joseph T. Robinson (D.. Ark. and Senator Charles L. McNary R . Ore.' are continuing as Democratic and Republican leaders, respectively. Democratic leaders have been summoned to the White House Friday night for a legislative conference They anil have heard Mr. Roosevelt's message by then with its reassurance that the nation is in the process of recovery from unparalleled depression. Business men and others who look to r he President for protection against radical legislators found comfort as Congress opened in the revision of House rules. The power (Turn to Pare Three)

The Indianapolis Times Generally fair tonight, with moderate cold wave. Lowest tonight 10 to 15. Friday fair with rising temperature by night.

NRA w wi oo oua *\ f

VOLUME 46—NUMBER 203

MINTON SWORN IN AS SENATOR Hoosier Delegation Attends Ceremony, Reception at Capital. B’l Timrtt Special WASHINGTON. Jan. 3.—For the first time in 18 years a sitting Democratic Senator today led anew colleague of his party to the rostrum to take the oath of office. The new Senator, Sherman Minton, was presented by the now senior Senator, Frederick Van Nuys Both are Democrats. Not since the late Senator John Kern of Indiana presented the late Senator Thomas Taggart for the oath taking has both seats in the upper House been occupied by Democrats from Indiana. Senator Minton was in the traditional irock coat and Senator Van Nuys also was garbed formally. More than 35 guests from Indiana were present in tiie senate gallerj to witness the new Senators oath taking. The delegation was led by the smiling P*eas Greenlee, McNutt secretary, who is credited with much of the strategy which made Senator Minton's nomination and election possible. Others in the delegation were Omer Jackson. Democratic State Chairman Keith Johns, state Democratic secretary; State Treasurer William Storen; Appellate Judge Posey Kime; Misses Margaret Buchanin, Mary Jo Keene and Mary Krmmer of the Statehouse staff; Carl Gray. Petersburg; Russell Handy. Shelbyville, and Russell Wise. Union City. Led by Secretary James Penman. Senator Minton's staff also was present. This afternoon the Senator and Mrs. Minton were to hold a reception at the Willard Hotel. The Minton Special” delegation, which came here in a group, has headquarters at the Mayflower.

ASSEMBLY WILL ACT. ON CREDITCONTROL Legislative Move Follows Detailed Survey. Discussing generally his legislative program. Gov. Paul V. McNutt today admitted that "consumer credit con- j trol* would be one of the major problems upon which the 1935 Legislature might act. The term which the Governor used may be broadly extended to take in auto loan companies, petty finance corporations and other mediums whereby the system of installment buying has been expanded For more than a year, a survey has been conducted by H O. Stone, research director of the State Department of Financial Institutions, and Herman Wells, also of the department. in order to gather data on the problem of credit control. In answer to the assertion that there would be a powerful lobby against any restraining measure on such companies, the Governor said that if the truth were put before the people such a lobby would be power- i less. •SUICIDE STRIKE* IS~ CONTINUED BY MINERS 32 Stay I'nder Ground. Demand Rack Pay. Steady Work. A* v f mrtf *1 l*rt ** WARSAW. Jan. 3.—Thirty-two miners remained today in the Baska pit of,the Dobrowa coal field, on a "suicide strike" in hope of obtaining two months' back pay and insuring continued operation of the mine. Retreating before the water advancing in the galleries at the rate of 250 cubic feet a minute, with the mine pumps idle. 30 miners gave up and went to the surface. The rest remained adamant, 1

HITLER MEETS NAZI AIDS AT BERLINPARLEY Conference Hastily Called; Rumors of Discontent in Party Denied. RU t llilrtl [>rr*x BERLIN, Jan. 3.—A hastily-sum-moned meeting of the entire political and military leadership of the Nazi party was opened by Chancellor Adolf Hitler in the State Opera House today. The meeting was described as “a festive New Year's ceremony” to prove the solidarity of the party. The meeting lasted an hour and 15 minutes. It was understood Hitler made a speech denying extensive rumors abroad about discontent in the elite storm guards and imminent changes in the party government and leadership. The arrival of Hitler and other leaders was in marked contrast to their usual formal public appearances. An open car bearing them sped almost surreptitiously down Unter Den Linden at twice the usual speed. The general public went abor' its business unaware of what wa on. since no word had appe. the press. Many wondered, however, at the heavy cordon of storm troopers. Whereas ordinarily he stands in the car and receives the shouted ' Heil" of thousands, the Reichsfuehrer sat unobtrusively in the front seat. Two touring cars which followed were packed with 15 bodyguards of the elite S. S. troops. The entire route from the chancellery to the opera was lined on either side by a double cordon of troops, facing alternately the street and the sidewalk. A few hundred people near the opera greeted Hitler. An hour previously proi linent leaders had begun arriving. Hermann Wilhelm Goering. premier of Prussia, in his blue aviator’s uniform, smilingly acknowledged cheers which were surprisingly sparse. The Storm Troopers, who had been in position for four hours, stamped their feet and ate brandychocolates to keep warm in the freezing weather.

COLD WAVE IS DUE TONIGHTJS WARNING Mercury May Drop to 10, Is Indication. On the heels of a period of unseasonably warm weather, the city was to be gripped by a cold wave tonight. the weather bureau announced. Yesterday the thermometer reached 46. At 9 a. m. today the temperature was 38. John H. Armington, Federal meteorologist, explained the new cold spell that may take temperature as low as 10 to 15 above zero tonight. as being the high pressure area, born in the extreme Northwest, that shoved the warm wave of today and yesterday down to this area. The warm, or low pressure area, has passed the city by. and the city now is due for a compensating reverse of the thermometer. Temperatures should rise late tomorrow, Mr Armington said. ROOSEVELT SECLUDED IN WHITE HOUSE STUDY Intends to Spend Entire Day on Tomorrow’s Message. thi l ,if ted Press WASHINGTON. Jan. 3.—While Washington turned its interest to the opening of Congress today. President Roosevelt withdrew in strictest privacy—to his study in the White House. • In the oval study of the second floor of the White House he was putting the finishing touches on his messages to Congress, the first to be delivered tomorrow. Not a caller was on the President's list and none will be. Stephen T. Early, White House Secretary, explained. All day the President planned to work alone on his addresses, editing and revising. He hoped to have them completed by nightfall. REP. BANKHEAD ILL: HOUSE LACKS LEADER Congressman Must Stay in Hospital Another Week. Rtl Cfitf4 Prrt* WASHINGGTON. Jan. 3.—The big Democratic majority in the House will have to organize and conduct its first business without its new floor leader. Rep. William Bankhead <Ala.). who is ill. His brother. Senator John Bankhead. said today the House leader probably will have to remain in Navy Hospital another week for treatment of a stomach ailment.

INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1935

City Jobs Get Kern Scrutiny Vacancies Not to Be Filled Until Careful Study Is Made. After a brief relaxation following his inauguration Tuesday. Mayor John w. Kem today settled down to a study of the many problems facing him. including several major and a number of minor appointments. Probably the most perplexing problems facing the new Mayor in the line of appointments is in the Health Department. No action has been taken on any post in this department and none will be taken for some time, the Mayor said today. “The Health Department is too important to the welfare of the people to be acted on hastily,” he said. Political Influence Barred “If there are any changes in the department, they will not be political. I intend to look into the matter pretty thoroughly. I know enough of hospitals and public health problems that I shall take no action until I have been able to avail myself of the opportunity of conferring with a number of nonpartisan medical and public health experts.” There will be no vacancies on the Health Board itself until July 1. In addition to the board, other posts on which the Mayor must act include the Health Board secretary, a position held by Dr. Herman G. Morgan through both Republican and Democratic administrations for the last twenty years; City Hospital superintendent, now held by Dr. Charles W. Myers, and City Hospital business director, held by Earl Wolf. There are a large number of minor posts in this department to be filled. Other Pressing Problems Among the other more pressing appointments facing the Mayor are choices for Park Board Superintendent; Civil Engineer, Recreation Director, Safety Board Secretary, Works Board Secretary, City Plan Commission secretary-engineer, and attorneys for the various City Hall boards. A. C. Sallee, park superintendent, has strong support from many quarters because of his excellent administration of the vast parks system under the Sullivan administration. At the same time, there is reported to be rather strong opposition to his retention by political leaders because of the number of political plums in the way of jobs his department controls, and his reported failure to co-operate wholeheartedly with the county committee in the past in filling these posts. Hendricks Receives Barking Mayor Kern said no change is contemplated in this position at the present, but declined to elaborate on this statement. The Mayor made the same comment in regard to the position of recreation director, now held by M. Walden Middlesworth. Reports are that Middlesworth probably will be reappointed. For the post of Safety Board secretary, the name of Blythe Q. Hendricks. former newspaper man and former state employe, has been hinted strongly as successor to Walter Lewis, incumbent, but the Mayor said he had no announcement to make at this time in connection with this post. Frick May Be Renewed The Mayor also said he had made no decision in regard to the fates of Ernest Frick, Works Board Secretary; A. H. Moore, City Civil Engineer; H B. Steeg. City Plan Commission Secretary-Engineer, and attorneys for the various boards. Mr. Frick has been reported as being considered for reappointment, as has Mr. Moore, although the latter is a Republican. Bruce Short also has been mentioned for the engineer’s job. Harry Schopp, South Grove links professional, has been boosted strongly for parks superintendent, and also for golf supervisor. Reports are that M. G. Johnson, assistant city engineer, may be reappointed, or possibly elevated to the engineer’s post.

TODAY’S WEATHER

Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 36 10 a. m 40 7 a. m 36 11 a. m 41 Ba. m 36 12 (hom).. 37 9 a. m 38 1 p. m 34 Sun rises tomorrow, 7:07; sets, 4:33. DISMISSAL OF ICKES’ TRUSTED AIDS HINTED Serio>s Split in Administration Is Seen in Official Family Row. By L >■ ‘ted Pres* WASHINGTON. Jan. 3—Reports of a bitter controversy within the Administration, involving suggested resignation of two trusted aids of Harold L. Ickes, Secretary’ of Interior. were confirmed today by authoritative sources. The persons involved are Louis R Glavis. chief Interior Department investigator, and Ebert K. Buriew, Secretary Ickes’ administrative assistant. "Hints" to Secretary Ickes regarding them have been given by the President's official family, although not by Mr. Roosevelt himself. it was learned., Mr. Ickes has shown every indication of standing back of them, and unless the incident can be smoothed over it may develop a serious split in the Administration.

BARY UNDBERGH MURDERED BY HAUPTMANN AT TIME OF KIDNAPING, STATE CLAIMS; FLIER TO TESTIFY

Tears Dim Eyes of Anne Lindbergh as State Paints Vivid Picture of Baby’s Slaying; Mrs. Hauptmann Unmoved

* W iJBmlkT-ii,

Mrs. Anne Lindbergh . . . mother of sorrow.

V „ BY JANE DIXON United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1935. by United Pressi FLEMINGTON. N. J.. Jan. 3—A small young woman in dark dress slips inconspicuously through a door at the side of the courtroom and takes a seat that has been reserved for her. A tremor and a hush. Anne Lindbergh. The mother of the tragic baby is directly in front of and only a few feet away from Mrs. Bruno Hauptmann, whose husband is on trial on charges of murdering Mrs. Lindbergh’s first born son.

Mrs. Lindbergh's arrival brings a craning of necks. Four rows back of Mrs. Lindbergh is Mrs. Hauptmann, a pale blond. She watches Mrs. Lindbergh’s entrance with keen interest. But when the slender form of the colonel's wife sinks into a chair, she becomes buried in the mass of spectators, and neither ’'woman can see the other. The celonel acknowledges his wife's presence with a nod. Hauptmann looks up with some interest the disturbance, and then ' quickly lets his gaze drop to the floor. Mrs. Lindbergh is in black with trimmings of blue fox. A small black satin turban hugs her dark head. She sits with hands clasped in her lap. Small graceful hands they are, hands that fall, naturally, into a pose for an artist. Her eyes travel across the enclosure before the judge’s bench to where her husband sits behind the prosecutor's table. A fleeting smile of understanding, of encouragement, passes between them. a it a MRS. LINDBERGH listens attentively to the questioning of talesmen for the jury. At mention of capital punishment, her slender hands twist in her lap and then resume their graceful repose. If she is aware of the proximity of that other mother who feels on her shoulders the world's opprobrium, not the world's praise, she gives no .sign, Atty. Gen.” David T. Wilentz has begun his address to the jury. He describes the das- | tardly crime, the kidnaping of Baby Lindbergh. The thief who came in the dark night intent on a dark deed. The stealing of the child, the flight, the deliberate murder from a blow which caused a fracture such as only the hand of fear and of greed could visit upon its victim. A flush mounts the pale face of Anne Lindbergh. In her lap her hands open and close spasmodically, then clasp tightly. One hand circles her wrist. The flush on her cheeks and her brow draws away, leaving a strange, luminous pallor such as suffering draws over the face of humans. Her head droops ever so slightly. Her eyes. too. are cast down. One expects them to close in an instinctive effort to shut out the prosecutor's searing picture. MRS. HAUPTMANN listens to the scathing arraignment which paints in sweeping lines i. and colors without compromise, the murder picture of her husband. She is unmoved. You might say she is only mildly interested. But Hauptmann's arms are folded so tightly across his chest that his shoulders look as though they might burst through his coat. “And Lindy who could find a speck at the end of the world could not find his child because Hauptmann had murdered aim.”

Entered as Second-Class Matter -t Postoffice. Indianapolis. Ind.

The voice of Mr. Wilentz. sends the accusation crackling through the courtroom like a shot. Mrs. Lindbergh's chin rises a bit. then droops. Now Mr. Wilentz describes in graphic detail the pittiful body, decomposing in the shallow grave near the Lindbergh home in the Sourland Mountains. The little hand, the tiny leg eaten away by the creatures of the woods. A lovely golden-haired baby boy who played so happily in the sunshine on *he fateful day, the only son of a mother whose gallantry is the pride of a nation, a father whose heroism is a world tradition, that small mite so precious to its parents, found at last, returning to the earth. u a a K NNE LINDBERGH’S head is . very low now. She hides dim eyes. When Wilentz finishes his blistering address to the jury. Col. Lindbergh, who has been sitting tense and erect, relaxes in his chair. His blond boyishness is more suggestive of the campus than of the intrepid pathfinder, the adventurer in unpathed places, the father of sorrow. At the noon recess Mrs. Lindbergh leaves with her husband. The two of them pass so close to Mrs. Hauptmann that she must draw back her feet to allow them to pass. She peers after them as they disappear through the door.

BANK CALL ISSUED BY U, UNO STATE Condition as of Dec. 31 Is Requested. By United Press WASHINGTON. Jan. 3.—J. F. T. O’Connor. Controller of the Currency, today issued a call for the condition of national banks as of Dec. 31. The call was for the customary year-end condition statement and had been expected for several days. Richard A. McKinley, director of the Indiana State Department of Financial Institutions, today issued a call to 6tate banks in Indiana for their conditions as of Dec. 31. Times Index Bridge 4 Broun 11 Comics 17 Crossword Puzzle 17 Curious World 17 Editorial 12 Financial .13 Hickman—Theaters 8 Peeler 11 Radio 15 State News 10 Sports 14,15 Woman's Pages 4,5

JEN' .*•** \ ylI g||g§P|g§

Mrs. Bruno Hauptmann . . . stoical.

TALBOTT FACES SLAYING TRIAL Suspect Accused of Killing Sister-in-Law Lodged in County Jail. Harvey S. Talbott, alleged slayer of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Pauline D. Williams, 42, housekeeper at the Glenn Martin Apartments, 946 N. Meridian-st, today was in the Marion County Jail, awaiting trial on murder charges after his release yesterday afternoon from City Hospital. Talbott shot and killed Mrs. Williams Tuesday, Nov. 20. in an apartment which she maintained on W. ‘St. Joseph-st. He then fled across St. Joseph-st to the Glenn Martin and, racing up the stairs and threatening persons in the Glenn Martin, shot himself in the head. While he was recovering in the hospital from his head wound, ne was indicted for first and seconddegree murder by the Marion County Grand Jury. Later, state alienists expressed the belief that Talbott was of unsound mind at the time of the shooting. Yesterday afternoon, he was taken directly from the hospital to Municipal Judge Dewey Myers’ Court, where a police affidavit charging him with murder was dismissed since it already had been superseded by the. indictment. Then, he was taken to the jail. He appeared to be weak and had great, dark circles under his eyes. No attorney appeared for him and he showed no emotion during the brief time he was in Judge Myers’ court. At the time of the shooting. Talbott told investigators he was crazed by a drink given him by Mrs. Williams while he was suffering a fit of depression because of ill health and financial reverses.

SCHOOL ROLLS ARE REDUCED BY ILLNESS Teachers. Pupils Suffer from Current Respiratory Illness. Fifty-four teachers and a large number of pupils, not yet tabulated, were absent with respiratory afflictions when Indianapolis Public Schools resumed yesterday. Paul C. Stetson, superintendent, announced today. Mr. Stetson said there still is widespread sickness among pupils and teachers alike with colds, sore throats and other winter diseases that attack the throat and lungs. When the new semester begins Jan. 28, Mr. Stetson said, there would 2200 new freshmen in high schools and 2000 new pupils in first grades. He icould not testimate vet how many will be graduated from high schools at the mid-term. Total gain in public school attendance at the mid-year, he said, would be approximately 1900. ELECTION DATETs" SET Second District Congressional Ballot to Be Held Jan. 29. Gov. Paul V. McNutt today set Jan. 29 as date for the special Second District Congressional election.

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marlon County, 3 Cent*

Crushed Infant’s Skull as He Fled From Estate, Prosecutor Says. FOUR WOMEN ON JURY Colonel to Identify Suspect as Ransom Taker, Is Report. B'/ l nitei Prrs* FLEMINGTON, N. J., Jan. 3.—The state of New Jersey today branded Bruno Hauptmann as “the man who dealt Charles A. Lindbergh Jr. a murderous blow, crushing his skull, and who later stripped from the dead child's body the tell-tale sleeping garment to use for his evil purposes.” In his opening statement to the jury of eight men and four women. Atty. Gen. David T. Wilentz declared that the kidnap plot and the murder were conceived and executed by one man—“ The prisoner who sits before you. behind his distinguished counsel.” - Mr. Wilentz softly carried to the jury a picture of the peaceful Lindbergh manor in the Sourlands on. the night of March 1, 1932. He gave a pathetically drawn picture of a merry child, romping on the Lindbergh estate, loved by the family and the servants. Then his voice rose. His description of the commission of the crime produced cold chills. His'words were not measured. He told how the state “will prove” that the crime had been plotted for a long time—and that the former German machine gunner was its plotter.

He described how the abductor of the Lindbergh baby fled down the ladder from the nursery he had robbed, and how he dealt a “crushing blow” to the small head. “Then,” he shouted, “this man fleeing with his bundle—the dead ! child, the child deliberately killed —found part of his burden too heavy. He discarded the ladder and stripped and yanked the sleeping garment from the child’s body. Half an hour later he hastily scraped and dug a shallow grave and placed the body, face downward; in it.” Hauptmann Not Disturbed “The man who did this,” he said, “is in this courtroom.” He turned and for 10 seconds gazpd steadily at Hauptmann. Hauptmann, stolid, impassive, returned the g3ze unflinchingly. Mr. Wiltnez's outline of the caso provided the first tremendously dramatic scene in the crowded courthouse. As he spoke, not a sound couid be heard beyond the rustle of paper and racing pencils. Mr. Wilentz’ story to the jury was a complete, chronological picture, as the state sees it, of the drama that began in Hopewell 30 months ago, and that yesterday entered its last chapter with the trial of Bruno Hauptmann. He related the finding of the first ransom note in the empty nursery, and the negotiations between the elderly Bronx educator, Dr. John Condon, in the darkness of St. Raymond's Cemetery. He described the passage of t** $50,000 ransom money, from the hands of the doctor—“Jafsie"—to those of the extortioner. His voice again dropped and appeared almost to be breaking as he told the jurors how Col. Lindbergh, believing he was on the way to find his lost child, made his futile, hopeless flights to Vineyard Haven Mter he had paid the ransom. Again his voice rose when he related the discovery of the baby’s battered hody, near a lonely road irr the hills above the Lindbergh, estate. \ . Exposes State’s Theories Mr. Wilentz's complete exposure of the theories upon which the state of New Jersey seeks to send the Bronx carpenter to the electric chair disposed of many fantastic rumors. It showed that the prosecution will stake everything on a direct murder charge, and that it will attempt to show when, where and by what method Hauptmann killed the infant. It develop ’d several points which had been previously closely guarded secrets of the State Police and prosecution. The first was that Baby Lindbergh was ‘killed instantly and with mailed aforethought,” and' that the child was dead before the fleeing kidnaper left the Lindbergh ests.te. The second was that the kidnaper never had any intention of keeping the child alive and of returning him to the family upon payment of the ransom. The third was that, with planned detail, the abductor took the garment from the child's body, deliberately purposing to use it in the following negotiations. Walter Roberts, former Hunterdon County engineer was the first witness. Hg brought with him a stack of maps shoving the location and architecture of the Lindbergh home in the foothills of the Sourlands. Three of them were entered as state exhibits before the luncheon recess. These maps were designed to prove that the crime took place In Hunterdon County. The trial swung into rapid action today with the prospect that before (Turn to Page Three)