Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 206, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1935 — Page 1

■ • SCRJPPS - HOWARD

14,000,000,000 ASKED BY ROOSEVELT FOR DIRECT WORK RELIEF IN NATION

President Makes No Recommendations for Increased Taxes; Nuisance Levies to Continue, However, He Says. DEFICIT TO TOUCH $4,528,000,000 Chief Executive Asks Congress in Budget Message to Transfer $900,000,000 for Emergency Aid Appropriations. (Text of Budget Message on Page 3) By United Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.—President Roosevelt this afternoon in his annual budget message asked Congress for a lump sum appropriation of $4,000,000,000 to substitute work relief for the dole in the third year of recovery. Mr. Roosevelt estimated expenditures at $8,520,000,000 and reported he could not balance the budget as he had hoped to do in the 1936 fiscal year beginning next July 1. The $4,000,000,000 represents the cost in the 1936 fiscal year of putting to work 3,500,000 persons now' on the dole.

There was no recommendation for increased taxes. Expiring nuisance levies are to continue. Mr. Roosevelt said relief appropriations for the current fisral year would be exhausted early next month. He asked Congress to transfer $900,000,000 for unobligated emergency appropriations to pay for relief until useful work financed by the Government absorbs the dole horde. The gross deficit in the 1936 fiscal year will approximate $4,528,000,000, of which $636,000,000 will represent debt retirement. Administration spokesmen assured questioners this budget was not a step toward currency Inflation. The President estimated that 4,000.000 persons had been re-employed since March, 1933. The message estimated that the national debt would increase from approximately $31,000,000,000 on July 1. 1935, to a record high of $34,239.000.000 on June 30. 1936, the end of the next fiscal year. Trend Is Downward Mr. Roosevelt said the budget he presented this afternoon was in balance except for expenditures to create work for the jobless. The trend of net recovery and relief expenditures is downward for the next fiscal year compared with the one which will end June 30, 1935. and regular Federal expenses are increasing. Mr. Roosevelt foreseees over all expenditures of $8,520,000,000 in the next fiscal year, slightly more than half of it for recovery and relief. The Administration is convinced this rising rate of expenditure does not in any way require currency inflation Profits on gold seizure—s2,Bll,000.000—have not been tapped so far for regular or emergency Government expenditure. That hoard is regarded as a comfortable backlog of ready cash for use in unforeseen and unprecedented emergency Treasury statements indicate, however. that some profits from the minting of silver have been spent. Defense Outlay Is Huge For national defense Mr. Roosevelt proposes an unparalleled peace time outlay of $899,948,065. of which approximately $106,000,000 is a carryover from the present fiscal year. The remainder is "new r money” for thf defense of the nation. Mr. Roosevelt expressed the hope as he submitted his message to Congress that diminishing figures for recovery and relief and for total expenditures represented the beginning of a series of annual reductions leading to an absolutely balanced budget. He expressed no opinion when the budget might be balanced. His resume of the financial plan for the fiscal year 1936 showed that recovery and relief costs in the present fiscal year include a charge of $199,000,000 for Agricultural Adjustment Administration payments to farmers. Represents Only Excess The $199,000,000 represents only the excess of AAA expenditures over receipts of processing taxation. The total AAA expenditures are estimated for the present fiscal year at $788,000,000 and preceding tax collections at $589,000,000. For the next fiscal year Mr. Roosevelt estimates that AAA taxes will exceed expenditures by $98,000,000 and this sum has been credited against prospective recovery* and relief expenditures. reducing that sum from $4,110,000,000 to the foregoing $4,012,000,000. While Mr. Roosevelt has not attempted to belittle the rising national debt by counting RFC and other obligations as assets, neither has he charged against the Government as a liability certain contingent obligations of the Government. These are represented by bonds of the Farm Credit Administration, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation and other emergency agencies which actually are guaranteed by the Government. If these obligations are defaulted the Treasury would have to make them gcod. For Your Ignition and Carburetor checked—See Carburetor Sales, 214 E. Ohio—Adv.

The Indianapolis Times Rain and continued mild temperature tonight and Tuesday; probably colder Tuesday night.

NR A, W *9* Wl DO ouo

VOLUME 46—NUMBER 206

FRANCE, ITALY SIGNACCORD Treaty Guarantees Austria Freedom; Britain to Join, Is Belief. By United Press ROME. Jan. 7.—Premier Benito Mussolini and French Foreign Minister Pierre Laval tonight signed an acord generally regarded as an outstanding safeguard for the future peace of Europe. Three main agreements and additional protocols were signed at 7 p. m. at a ceremony in Venice palace. Britain and Germany will soon notify the powers of their acceptance of the pact which guarantees the integrity of Austria, one of the mast troublesome and dangerous issues confronting European diplomats. The accord, which other powers will be invited to join, was concluded here after week-end negotiations.

STOLL KIDNAPER IN CITY, POLICE TIPPED Robinson Seen in Automobile Here, Is Report. A report that a man answering the description of Thomas H. Robinson Jr., under Federal Court indictment as the alleged kidnaper of Mrs. Alice Speed Stoll, Louisville Junior Leaguer, was in an automobile parked on New York-st near Colorado-av sent a police squad speeding there today. The tip came to police by telephone and the tipster told Capt. Otto Pettit that was in a car bearing Colorado license plates. Fearful that the alleged kidnaper might have a short-wave radio in his car, if it were he, Capt. Pettit rushed Sergt. Chester Timmerman and his squad to the scene without a general radio alarm. When Sergt. Timmerman reached the Intersection of the two streets, the car with Colorado license plates had left. Later in the day, police still were looking for the.car on Indianapolis streets. Only 10 days ago, The Indianapolis Times learned on indisputable authority that Federal agents believe Robinson is in Indianapolis and that they have searched numerous boarding houses and hotels here in an unceasing hunt for him. L'nion Veteran Is Dead By United Press MEXICO. Mo., Jan. 7.—W. H. Upham, 90. a retired music dealer and friend of the late John Coolidge, father of former President Calvin Coolidge, died late yesterday. He was this city’s last surviving Union Civil War veteran.

Havana-Bound Liner Crashes Into Shoals; Heroism of Crew Averts Disaster; Scores Are Rescued From Ship

By Vnited Prest MIAMI. Fls., Jan. 7.—Thirtyeight passengers from the wrecked Ward liner, Havana, were landed here today. They told of remarkable heroism by the Havana's crew, many of whom were aboard the illfated Morro Castle, after the New York-Havana liner piled up on Mantanilla shoals, 60 miles due east of Ft. Pierce, Fla., threatening another major ship disaster. One passenger and one member of the crew remained ucaccounttd' for. but Ward line officials insisted that all passengers and all of the crew were safe. Eleven passengers were aboard the United Fruit liner Peten and; will be landed at Havana at noon * The' survivor? brought here were picked up from life boats by the Morgan freighter £1 Oceano. j

SINGLE HOUSE ASSEMBLY FOR INDIANAURGED Unicameral Legislature Is Aim of Bill Drafted by Hoosier. BY JAMES DOSS Times Staff Writer The Indiana General Assembly will be asked to legislate itself out of existence, In its present form, in a bill being prepared by Rep. Joseph E. Klein, Democrat, “the George Norris of Indiana.’’ At first glance, such a proposal might seem too radical or too much against tradition for Indiana to stomach, but legislation to abolish the Senate and House of Representatives already has been enacted in Nebraska and a one-chamber House established in their stead. From all indications, Rep. Klein, Whiting merchant, will wage the same sort of lone-handed fight that faced Senator Norris in the latter’s winning of the Nebraska revolution. People in Nebraska said the establishment of what is known as the unicameral plan couldn’t be done, but Senator Norris, 70-year-old fighter of power trusts and private greed, said it could. It was done when 748,000 Nebraskans voted on an amendment that snuffed out the life of their present legislative system. Last Two House Assembly This year’s Nebraskan legislature will be the last two-house assembly. In 1937, a lawmaking body of between 30 and 50 members will enact legislation for Nebraska. The experiment is simple in form. Briefly, its points are: 1. The legislature to be elected in 1936 will be nominated and elected on a nonpartisan ballot and will sit in a one-chamber legislature in 1937. Whether the members will be called senators, representatives or by some new title is not yet decided. 2. Salaries, depending on whether there are 30 or 50 members, will be paid from a fund ranging from $37,000 to $75,000. 3. The Governor shall retain the right of veto and of calling special sessions. 4. Li gislation by conference committees shall be abolished. 5. The Lieutenant-Governor shall preside, but a Speaker shall be elected to serve in the absence of the Lieutenant-Gqvernor. The latter would vote only to break a tie. 6. The legislature sitting this year shall district the state and specify the number of legislators the onechamber legislature shall contain in 1937. The quota can not be changed for ten years. These are the high points of the Nebraska unicameral plan and presumably the basis for Rep. Klein’s Indiana bill. Defines Political Philosophy The political philosophy behind the unicameral plan is defined by Senator Norris. He terms the two-chamber legislature antiquated and merely an outgrowth of the old English system of House of Lords and House of Commons. Why, he answers criticism of the unicameral plan, should there be two branches of a Legislature. when qualifications of members of both Houses are exactly the same? He points out that their duties are the same and that maintenance of two Houses is an unnecessary burden on the taxpayer in an era when the tendency in legislative reform is toward condensation of authority. A one-chamber House is directly under the public eye, he points out, and therefore responsibility for legislation can be fixed more directly on the individual member. Noblesville Dentist Kills Self By United Press NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Jan. 7.—Dr. Charles Cooper, 49, dentist, committed suicide today by shooting. Illness was blamed. A son and daughter survive.

Fifty of the 124 members of the Havana's crew were members of the crew of the Morro Castle, also a Ward liner, which burned recently off the New Jersey coast with a loss of 124 lives. The crew of the Morro Castle was accused of cowardice by many passengers, but passengers of the Havana had high praise for its conduct. Seaman Steve Fauslas, in charge of one of the lifeboats, kept it afloat single-handed three hours after it had been swept by a huge wave. But the greatest act of heroism was not by a member of the crew, but by a passenger. Mrs. Sonia London of Mexico City, and her two children, Elias, 3, and Fannie, 2. were swppt out of a lifeboat by a wave, too far for rescue. With a child under each arm she swam for half an hour,.. When taken aboard

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1935

Two-Hour Absence From Nursery Still Haunts Betty Gow

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Betty Gow ... A "Smart Young Lady” BY JANE DIXON United Press Staff Correspondent N. J., Jan. 7.—" Now Miss Gow.” ' Judge Thomas Trenchard spoke in his best gentleman-of-the-old-school manner. A slim young woman in brown stepped across the incldsure before the judge’s bench, the Scottish nursemaid who was last to look upon the living face of baby Charles A. Lindbergh Jr. • < Betty wears a mack velvet pill-box hat of the fashionable Princess Marina model. Her shapely ankles are incased in sheer wood-brown stackings. Her shoes are wood-brown suede. Her accent is decidedly British. She makes a point of having had tea downstairs on the afternoon preceding the kidnaping. “I’he baby had a cold. I decided to make him a small flannel shirt.” Betty Gow looks at the tiny mouldering shirt, found on the pathetic little body under the bushes near the Lindbergh home. “That is exactly the shirt I made for the baby.”

Now Betty is standing by the baby's cot. “I bent down. He wasn’t there.” It is difficult for the nursemaid, the playmate, the constant companion of Baby Charles to frame the words, she tries to force back the tears. They choke her. Long pauses seperate her words. non Graphically, she describes her frantic search for f h<s baby. It lead first to his mother. Her arms were empty. His father? No, the father thought baby was in his crib. Rushing of feet up the stairs. The rifled nursery. “Anne, they’ve stolen our baby.” Betty Gow lowers her head. The tears have overflowed. An attendant brings her a glass of water. She sips gracefully. A short interval during which she makes a visible effort to recover her poise, then the questioning is resumed: Attorney Edward Reilly, of the defense, takes Betty Gow in hand. He wants to know all about her affair with “Red” Johnson, the sailor. When Attorney Reilly asks Betty about “Red” Johnson she very haughtily tella him about "Mr. Henry Johnson.” * * a THE U. S. A. still is the land of opportunity. The Scottish working girl testified that she saved SBOO dollars from 1929. when she came to this country, until her return to Scotland in 1933. She has not worked since her return. but has “been living from capital.” She had been offered employment at “S pound 10” (about sl2) a weeL in a Glasgow shoe store, but refused the offer to return to America "in behalf of justice.” A bad moment for Betty. Mothers oh' the jury are liable to conclude the nurse maid was remiss in her duty. “I made the baby an extra little

the Oceano, Elias appeared dead. Seamen applied artificial respiration for two hours and revived him. Out at Matanilla Shoals where the Havana still was held fast, seas were reported subsiding and the ship was said to be in no further danger. Capt. A. W. Peterson and all members of his crew not needed to man the lifeboats, had remained aboard. An effort to refloat her will be made today. Thirty of the crew were landed here. Thirteen were aboard the Peten. Eighty-two remained aboard. Fourth Officer John Rich, in charge of the five lifeboats launched by the Havana yesterday morning, was aboard the Oceano. He believed faulty navigation instruments caused the wreck. They showed the Havana 25 miles off the shoals a few minutes before the ship piled up in heavy seas. Visibility rau bad.

woolen sleeping shirt. I rubbed his chest with medicine. I gave him a physic and put him to bed about 8 o’clock.” “And you did not return to see how he was until 10?” “That is correct.” Betty’s chin lifts. She flashes a straight look of defiance at her inquisitor, then glances quickly in the direction of the jury. Twenty-four eyes are fixed on her. Each eye carries a question mark. Betty drops her chin ever so slightly and gazes at her hands folded in her lap.

Hop-and-Skip Mayor Still Jump Ahead of Sheriff 18 Houses Now Hooked Up to City’s Power Plant; the Chase Is in Its Seventh Day. V By Times Special HUNTINGTON, Ind., Jan. 7.—Sheriff O. E. Johnson this afternoon continued into the seventh day his attempt to serve on Mayor Clare W. H. Bangs a court order restraining him from doing what he’s doing. But the wily Mayor cunningly shrouded his movements in complete secrecy except that he caused eight more homes to be wired with munici-

pal electricity, in violation of a Circuit Court order, and issued a militant edition of his Huntington News. A committee of citizens was considering asking the sheriff to extend to the Mayor, when and if he finds him, an invitation to the town’s ‘home-coming,” tentatively set for some time in August. A devout member of the United Brethren Church, Mayor Bangs had no work done on Sunday, but, promptly at midnight, phantom crews began operations and brought to a total of 18 the number of residences now using municipal power,

Dr. Howard Fox, New’ York, one of the passengers, said he planned to ask a Carnegie hero medal for Seaman Fauslas. While all the passengers praised the conduct of the seamen who manned the lifeboats, some were critical of Capt. Peterson and of the Havana’s equipment. Anna Brady, New York, and her brother Frank, said the lifeboats were launched too soon and that the passengers need not have left the Havana until the seas had calmed sufficiently to assure perfect safety. The boat they were in almost sank because it was waterlogged, they said. They sat waist-deep in water until picked up. Only one person was known to be dead. He was R. W. Rittenhouse, a passenger of New York City, who died of apoplexy soon after the boat in which he had a seat was launched.

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

BETTY GOW INDIGNANTLY DENIES ANY CONNECTION WITH LINDBERGH KILLING

DR. CONDOH TO NAME SUSPECT is ipra Jafsie to Place Taciturn Hauptmann at Scene of Crime. By United Press FLEMINGTON. N. J„ Jan. 7. When Dr. John F. ( Jafsie) Condon appears as a voluntary witness against Bruno Hauptmann, he will testify that Hauptmann told him he was in the Lindbergh nursery the night of the kidnaping, the United Press was informed on high official authority today. Dr. Condon not only will identify Hauptmann as the mysterious “John” to whom he paid $50,000 ransom in St. Raymond’s Cemetery, the Bronx, but will place him at the scene of the crime. This will be the state’s second great stroke in its prosecution of the taciturn Bronx carpenter for the kidnaping and murder. Col. Lindbergh identified Hauptmann’s voice as that of the extortioner he heard call out to Dr, Condrin at the cemtery. These disclosures definitely clear up the part Dr. Condon will play in the Hauptmann trial. Heretofore, his name has been surrounded by a mass of reports, many contradictory. Dr. Condon has been careful to evade direct questions. Dr. Condon probably will not be called as a witness until the latter part of this week. The state is presenting its evidence in chronological order to maintain the consecutive links by w r hich it hopes to send Hauptmann to the electric chair. Before Dr. Condon paid Col. Lindbergh’s money to the supposed kidnaper, he had one lengthy conference with him. “John” assured Dr. Condon that he was the man who climbed a ladder Into the Lindbergh nursey and stole the baby. Dr. Condon will recite that conversation from the witness stand, and in identifying Hauptmann as “John” will thus place Hauptmann in the nursery. Dr. Condon held a long conference with Atty. Gen. David T. Wilentz in Trenton last night, and will remain in a hotel room on the floor reserved for state witnesses until called. When he testifies, he will be subjected to a pounding cross-ex-amination by defense counsel. The elderly educator, known to be emotional, was a subject for anxiety on the part of observers. Many wondered if he would be unable to stand the type of cross-examination he is certain to receive. Dr. Condon, throughout his negotiations with “John,” exercised all his psychological powers and his moralizing influence to soften the extortionist.

despite the restraining order ob-’ tained New Year’s Day by the Northern Indiana Power Cos. The Mayor popped into Marion, Ind., Saturday nighc, and explained how he operates. “I slip into town at night, station 24 policemen around the block in which the house wanting service is located, and hire electricians to uo the work. The electricians are instructed to report, to the foreman but we do net give tnem his name. “I give some kid or the street a dime to carry my orders to my trusted men. The orders are carried out faithfully.” It’s just that easy, the Mayor said, as his paper was selling at 5 cents a copy telling the residents that the city plant will be operating to capacity within 30 days. Capacity, he said, was 500 customers. Meanwhile, the Northern Indiana Power Cos. smiled a broad corporative smile and inserted an ad in the Huntington Herald-Press calling “yo-ho” to the Mayor and telling him to -‘come on home, no one’s going to bite you.” The “ad” goes on to say that the Mayor is employing out-of-town labor to hook up his municipal plant to residences whereas his campaign promise was to give jobs to Huntington family heads. City Attorney Claude Cline, freed last week of contempt charges in connection with the violation of the restraining order, was to appear in court today and ask that the order be modified. David Smith, Ft. Wayne jurist, assumed jurisdiction in the case today on application of the company last week for a change of venue. Meanwhile the Mayor was here—was there—was gone!

Slain Baby’s Nursemaid Wages Verbal Battle With Hauptmann’s Attorney During Grilling Cross-Examination. SCOTTISH GIRL WEEPS ON STAND Spectators Applaud State Witness in Heated Exchange With Lawyer; Tells of Kidnap Discovery. By United Press FLEMINGTON, N. J., Jan. 7.—Hashing- indignant replies at her heckler, Betty Gow, who was Charles A. Lindbergh Jr.’s nursemaid, withstood 90 minutes of cross-ques-tioning by Bruno Richard Hauptmann’s chief counsel today and, before the noon recess, had turned back repeated insinuations that she might have played any part, however innocent, in the kidnaping and murder of baby Charles. The Scottish girl, an attractive figure with an assured manner and no fear at all of debating with Edward J. Reilly, her cross-examiner, admitted she had been given $650 and her passage from Scotland to return and testify—but she said she did it to aid justice.

LEGION OPENS WAR ON REDS Move to Disfranchise Members of Communist Party in U. S. Acting through its Americanism director, the American Legion this afternoon moved to disinfranchise members of the Communist Party of America by seeking adoption in all state legislatures of a bill which without naming the Communists as such, would accomplish this purpose. The proposed bill, sent to the 58 departments of the Legion by Homer L. Chaillaux, the Americanism director, was prepared from an original draft by Milton Phillips, Oklahoma Department Adjutant. Its text: “No political party shall be recognized and given a place on the ballot which advocates the overthrow by force or violence, or which advocates or carries on a program of sedition or of treason by radio, speech or press, of our local, state or National Government. “No newly organized political party shall be permitted on the ballot until it has filed an affidavit by its officers, under oath, that it does not advocate the overthrow of local, state or National Government by act of force, violence, and that it is not affiliated with any political party or organization, or sub-divi-sions of organizations, which does advocate such a policy by radio speech or press.” “See that the meaning is not altered,” Mr. Chaillaux writes in a letter accompanying the bill. “It might be well to have a penalty clause added. This would certainly do the job for all time of eliminating the Communist Party from the ballot in your state. If it is not now on the ballot in your state, it is just as essential that the bill be passed to prevent the possibilities of its later appearance upon the ballot.”

SLOT MACHINE DRIVE IN STATE CONTINUES One Chance in 1000 to Win, Experts Disclose. As state police headquarters awaited reports of additional weekend seizures of slot machines, A1 Feeney, state safety director, disclosed that seized machines bore printed statements that they were “fully insured and protected” by the Coin Machine Operators’ Association of Indiana, with headquarters in Indianapolis. At the same time, mathematical experts declared that the player of the machines had only one chance in a thousand to win the jack-pot, the goal of slot machine players. Machines seized had been "plugged” to pay heavy dividends for their ow-ners, it was disclosed. The state police drive against the illegal operation of the machines was extended today to Johnson County, from which County Prosecutor Scott Moser and Sheriff A. R. Mulkins made a joint appeal to Mr. Feeney for state police assistance.

TODAY’S WEATHER

Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 49 10 a. m 52 7a- m 49 11 a. m 54 Ba. m 49 12 (noon).. 54 8 a. m 50 1 p. n* 54 Sunrise tomorrow, 7:07 a. xp..; sunset, 4:37 p. m. *

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents

Justice Thomas W, Trenchard ordered that phrase stricken from the record, but the girl’s declaration, made through scornful lips and with flashing eyes, made its impression. Two sensations were provided early in her cfcss-examination. The first was when Mr. Reilly, as he had promised, began to explore her relationship with Henry (Red) Johnson. the sailor who vas her sweetheart, and who was h.mself held in jail for weeks until he could prove that he had no connection with the kidnaping. The second was when the name of Violet Sharpe, maid in the household of Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow, Mrs. Lindbergh's mother, *:&&■ brought into the case. Violet was the young woman who, rather than face an inquisition by the New Jersey state police, committed suicide by taking cyanide of potassium. The Sharpe incident, in the morning session of court, was shortlived. Mr. Reilly merely asked the witness if sne ever went out with Violet Sharpe, and received a firm “no’’ in response. Betty, who spoke softly but clearly, with a touch of a Scottish burr in her voice, clearly was resentful of any attacks upon her association with Henry Johnson. She corrected Mr. Reilly, who invariably insisted upon calling him “Red,” with the equally invariable response, "Mr. Johnson.” Detroit Connections Asked She admitted going to the movies with "Mr. Johnson,” and to frequenting amusement parks. She told how t lie tried to reach her friend by telephone at Englewood, on the fateful day on which she was suddenly told to leave the Morrow home and return to Hopewell, where her charge was suffering from a cold. The first attack came with a question regarding her associates when she worked in Detroit. There was purpose back of the question. The defense has set up a number of alternate theories to that of the state, and one of them is that the child was stolen by a Detroit gang. But Betty withstood this assault by showing that her associations in that city were innocent. Mr. Reilly swung into another attack, an indirect attempt to show Betty was not the devoted nursemaid she has said she was. He finally forced her to admit that the baby was alone in the nursery, asleep, from 8 p. m. until—well, until the kidnaping. She had not gone to the room until 10, when she made the horrifying discovery that the crib was empty. On direct examination, conducted by Atty. Gen. David T. Wilentz, she had told, with dramatic intensity, the story of the night of March 1, 1932. She was close to the breaking point when there was thrust before her the pitiful woolen shirt she had fashioned with her own hands, to supplement the child’s other clothing when he was put to bed with a cold. Answer Draws Applause Again she approached tears when she told of Mrs. Lindbergh's deep distress and fright upon the discovery of the vacant crib. But in the main she was rather more calm, occasionally defiant. Towards the end of the session, Reilly turned to her and said, “Now, Miss Gow, you're a smart girl, aren’t you?” “Yes, I am/’ she declared. The courtroom broke into applause. Miss Gow sobbed as she told of Col. Lindbergh’s reactions to the discovery that his baby was missing. “Anne, they’ve stolen our baby.'* Those, according to Miss Gow’s testimony, were the Colonel’s first words when he looked into the empty crib at the Lindbergh home near Hopewell on the night of March 1, 1932. Miss Gow was calm at first tinder the questioning of Atty.-Gen. David Wilentz. But as he led her closer and closer to the moment when she discovered that her infant charge was missing, sobs jTuni to Face lireej.